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Showing posts with label DIY baby clothes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DIY baby clothes. Show all posts

Thursday, July 10, 2014

Onesies



As a new mom who would like to stay at home I am now on the path with so many others to find something I can do at home that is flexible and takes minimal time. 
My cards were selling fine but the time to income ratio was not the best, even with just printing. 
So work with what you know.... Painting and baby goods. 
Thus birthed the cartoon inspired baby onesies. 

The original being a girl picachu and Charmander because there isn't enough girl pokemon options. Not that it needs a bow for a girl, but I like bows. 


Then we have to make the unisex options. 


And more...


And then some animals...


Totoro!


And a Dr. Who request 


And the very original on my sweetie... 

Isn't she a beaut?!

So that's what I've been up to; visit hdorrell.etsy.com/shop if you are interested in one for your little one!

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

DIY Baby Pants from Tshirts

I know there are lots of how-to's for this but none are quite the same. I combined a few I had found and hope my instructions are beginner friendly. 


Baby girl loves her new slimming pants. 

Things you need:
Old tshirt
Pair of baby pants to copy
Scissors
Pins
Matching thread
Sewing machine
Elastic
Washable marker
Safety-pin 


Start with a shirt and fold it in half. You can use either side as long as there is space. (With this one I chose from the middle because I didn't want extra seams up the sides of the pants.) Use a marker and outline an existing pair of pants about half an inch out from the pants for seam allowance. (I also made sure the pants outline goes to the bottom of the shirt so I don't have to hem the leg openings. )
The top of the outline, at the waist, should be about two inches higher for the elastic to be put in later. 


Cut it out. 

 I cut my pants a little long because baby Howard is a bit long. 


Open up pieces and put right sides facing in. Pin top curve. 


Sew with a zigzag stitch to allow for a bit of stretch. 


Open up the pants. Match up the seams and pin the pants. Then sew again with the zigzag stitch. (I back-stitched over the crotch for a bit more durability. )


Fold top seam under and pin. Next sew around, but leave a hole to thread in the elastic. 


Measure elastic I used about the same length as the above pair knowing the elastic will overlap a little - and that's ok because it's stretchier than the waistband of the above pair.  


Hook safety-pin on elastic and thread through the pants waist. 


Make sure you don't let the end slide through. Hold both pieces and scrunch the waistband. 


Pin elastic and sew. I went back and forth a couple times. 


 Then stretch the waistband out retracting the elastic and sew the hole shut.


Then repeat. You can even easily add lace or embellishments like the felt heart in the first picture. 

I love how easy this is and you can bet Charlotte will get most of her pants this way. Not to mention her Daddy just gave me new Tshirts  for dresses so be on the lookout for more to come!


Monday, March 31, 2014

Baby Dress from a T-shirt


This is possibly my new favorite dress for my baby girl. It is just so cuddly!


I started by cutting off the sleeves and then along the shoulder seam and side seams. 


I loosely measured how much a baby onsie overlaps. 


I also loosely measured how long across it was. I semi used this measurement but adjusted as I went on. 


I pinned approximately how long I needed. 


Using the onsie as reference I drew out a basic dress pattern. ( which I later altered)



I folded it in half to cut. 


I used the front piece as a template for cutting the back. 


I overlapped the neck pieces by about 2.5 inches and pinned them and trimmed them since they angled a bit. 


I used the sleeve from the t-shirt for the sleeve and measured width from the onsie. 


I drew with washable marker and make sure the opening would fit a baby hand. Of course I made it about a half inch larger than I thought I needed for the seam allowance. 


I cut both sleeves. And trimmed the edges. 


I put right sides together starting from the middle and pinned. Then sewed them together using a zig-zag stitch. 


After sewing both sleeves I turned it inside out matching front to back and adjusted it as needed. 


Of course my original pattern needed some tweaking.


I rounded off the skirt. Sewed down the sides with the zig-zag stitch again, and then hemmed the bottom edge turning it under once since it's a knit fabric and doesn't really fray. 


I of course then tested it on the baby. She loves it. Or at least I do. 

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

My First Baby Dress


Now before you get all excited about my sweet skills, this is the story of taking what's already cute and cutting it down to baby size, not working from scratch.


First I started with a perfectly good dress. 


Next I take a perfectly good baby dress and measure and then measure on the big dress starting at the perfectly good waistline.


Next, repeat for the length of skirt also starting at the waistline and mark. 



And finally take measurements for the waist and add a couple inches for leighway. (I'd add three or four if I made it again for the waist measurement)


When you cut make sure to cut an inch or two larger than you need to turn under seams and to allow for a less stretchy fabric/mistakes.


After cutting it down I measured again for about where I'd need the arm holes to start going down.


Then I made a cut for the arms (again leaving room to turn under).


I used a seam ripper and pulled out the little loops so I didn't have to make my own.

I also salvaged the straps.


I forgot about the pockets and sewed a straight line down them then trimmed the pocket off.


Then I hemmed the bottom of the dress after ironing.


This was a kinda nice dress so I was able to iron under the edges then tuck the straps and loops in for one sweep through sewing across the top.


I pinned them in and sewed close to the edge.


Here is the part I messed up a bit. I sewed the back seam, but had forgotten to make sure the sides were the same. Also I wish I'd made the elastic longer than I did. 


I'm new at the elastic thing. I used 4 inches and stretched it to six when I sewed it on. I should have used more and left excess fabric on the waist so the dress could last a little longer for a growing baby. The way I did it left little extra room and the end result was a little smaller than I'd hoped, but it does fit baby girl now so that's fun.

Poor thing had a clogged tear duct but she is still so sweet.

Annnd the finished back.