August 12, 2015

onesie to dress refashion {a tutorial}


Onesie to Dress Refashion DIY tutorial
Onesie to Dress Refashion DIY tutorial
Onesie to Dress Refashion DIY tutorial
Hello all! A friend of mine is having a baby girl and commissioned me to turn some plain baby onesies into little dresses. I loved the idea and it was so easy that I decided I needed to do the same with some of Jensen's onesies! And come on - it was a good excuse to go fabric shopping! ;) I made a tutorial to share because my technique is a little different than some of the methods I have seen online - I opted to add an elastic waist so that the skirt would gather a little more but still be able to stretch over Jensen's head! You can choose to keep the onesie in tact under the skirt portion- or if your baby has grown and the onesie is too short just cut off the bottom! (tip: make the bottom you just cut off into an easy diaper cover by folding over the cut edge and stitching on some elastic!) Happy sewing!
Onesie to Dress Refashion DIY tutorial
Onesie to Dress Refashion DIY tutorial
Onesie to Dress Refashion DIY tutorial
Onesie to Dress Refashion DIY tutorial
Onesie to Dress Refashion DIY tutorial
Onesie to Dress Refashion DIY tutorialYou only technically need 14 inches of 45 inch wide fabric, but it's good to go ahead and get 1/2 yard because then you have extra to use to make a headband or embellishment on the bodice of the dress! 1. Start by serging, zig zag stitching, or pinking the two long ends of your fabric to minimize raveling. Form a tube by stitching together the two short ends and press the seam open. Hem the bottom of the tube, this will be the bottom of the dress. I did a fairly wide hem because I like that look. 2. Sew two rows of basting (the longest stitch length) stiches about 1/4 of an inch apart at the top edge of your tube. Pull threads to gather up the skirt until it is slightly wider than the onesie. You'll want to mark the front and back centers and sides so that you can evenly disperse the gathers. 3. One the right side of the onesie draw a line 5/8ths of an inch below where you want the top of the skirt to hit, also mark the front and back centers and side seams so you can match up your onesie. You can use a regular pen or whatever you want because the skirt will cover your line anyways. 4. Make sure your skirt is wrong side out and pull the onesie through it so that you can only see the bottom portion of the onesie. Match up the gathered edge of the skirt with the line that you just drew, matching centers and sides and stretching the onesie to fit - use lots of pins if you have to. Now stitch a straight 5/8ths of an inch seam. Be careful to only stitch through one layer of fabric and one side of the onesie, you don't want to stitch the onesie shut. 5. Cut a length of elastic that is slightly smaller than the circumference of the onesie and sew the ends together so that you have a loop. Now mark the front and back centers and the sides. Stitch the elastic down onto the seam allowance with a zig-zag stitch (if you kept your onesie in tact this will just be one layer of the fabric you used for the skirt, or if you chopped off the bottom of the onesie the seam allowance will have a layer of skirt fabric and a layer of onesie fabric). 6. Flip your dress right side out and press the seam.This will make the seam lay flat as well as help your elastic shrink back so that your skirt portion is nice and gathered! Admire your handiwork! *Optional: make cute headbands, hairbows, or embellishments for the dress bodice with your fabric scraps!*
Onesie to Dress Refashion DIY tutorial
Onesie to Dress Refashion DIY tutorial
Onesie to Dress Refashion DIY tutorial

June 23, 2012

a thrifting confession & a before and after


 Confession: Sometimes, I like to buy frumpy, old, and ugly dresses from the thrift store...just for the fabric! Especially the ones in larger sizes with full skirts, and a lot of pleats (yay more fabric for the same low price!) I also enjoy that crazy look the  clerk gives me at checkout--she thinks I'm actually going to wear the dress as-is! :) Anyways, check out this gem of a dress I found the other day! The dress style, with box pleats, knife pleats, smocking at the waist, a button-up and zippered back closure, and the best part, shoulder pads, is ridiculously ugly. But, oh the fabric! It was a floral print, and in pink, yep I fell for it! Snatched it right up and placed in in my cart, I did! The fabric is 100% rayon..which I've never sewn with before, but it's a new favorite! It's really lightweight, but not sheer (so I don't have to wear a slip, or make a lining!), and it drapes really nicely! The best part is that I up-cycled a garment and didn't have to buy brand new fabric from a store! I deconstructed the dress, ironed out the fabric, and had enough for a skirt!--even reused the original dress zipper in the skirt. The pattern actually calls for an invisible zipper, but I didn't want to buy a new one. I also had enough fabric left for another project...more on that later ;) I used Simplicity's Cynthia Rowley 2512 pattern, and made version C. I love the wrap effect and the sweet little ruffle on the front left side! :) Have a great weekend!




June 21, 2012

styling a DIY summer oxford dress

DIY dress from Oxford-button up shirts, Target wedges, thrifted clutch
DIY dress from Oxford-button up shirts
Leather clutch and wedges
DIY dress from Oxford-button up shirts, blue belt, clutch, & wedges
Here's how I styled the dress I refashioned from two thrifted button-up oxford shirts! Yes, summer is officially here..I was sweating glistening while taking these photos! My husband (and usual outfit post photographer) is out of town so I had to resort to the self-timer on my old point-and-shoot camera! Read: kindly ignore the grainy-ness of these photos :) TC is probably glad; however, to get a break from my bossiness when it comes to taking outfit pictures! ha ha Happy Thrifted Thursday! :)
outfit details:
dress/handmade by me from thrifted shirts, clutch/thrifted, blue belt/free from work, wedges/Target (spring 2011). necklace/Cato's

June 18, 2012

oxford button-up refashion into a summer dress!

I recently refashioned two thrifted button-up oxford shirts into a simple dress! It's light, comfortable, and so perfect for summer! :) Would you like to make one?! Here's how!

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