Make a Toddler Dress From Womans Shirt

refashion an old or unworn women's tee into an adorable dress for a baby/toddler girl with this easy sewing tutorial

We all have them – clothes we never wear because they just don't fit right, or are the wrong style, or were a bad purchase to begin with. The shirt I started with for this project never got much wear time because although I love the bright yellow and the stripes, the fabric was just a little too thin and clingy to sufficiently disguise the fact that I've had five children. So it languished at the bottom of my closet until a string of warm-weather days made me decide to turn it into a dress for my baby girl. It was really simple, and you can use the same process to turn any adult sized knit (stretchy) shirt into an adorable refashioned baby/toddler girl dress. Here's how I did it:

First, lay that shirt down on the table, smoothing it out so the bottom of the front and back match up. Then grab a dress that currently fits your intended recipient and lay it over the shirt. We just want to use this dress to get an idea of the correct size to cut our new dress, but knit is very forgiving so this doesn't need to be perfect.

a baby dress laid over fabric to use as a pattern

In fact, the dress I used for sizing had a little different shape than I wanted – it flared out at the bottom where I wanted a fairly straight silhouette, so you'll see that I just used it as a basic guide instead of cutting around it exactly. I cut a straight line up the side of the dress, then flared out slightly as I got to the sleeve portion of my green dress, then rounded above the shoulder and cut a small dip out at the neck (keep the neck dip small for now – you can make it bigger later).

Dress pattern piece folded in half to cut other side

Once I got one side cut, I flipped it over and used it as a pattern to cut the other side. This is the basic shape I ended up with:

Baby dress front piece cut out, with scissor

Note: if you have buttons down the front of your shirt you'll want to cut at least half an inch above a button. I cut this neck a little closer to the button than I should have.

Another note: If the shirt you are using does not have buttons, you'll probably want to put some sort of button closure on your back piece, something that will look like the picture below. If you need help doing this, check out Jess's fantastic tutorial here at Craftiness is Not Optional. Do that first, before proceeding to the next step here.

A close up of a purple baby dress with button closure on the back

We have the dress piece cut out, but we will also need some strips of stretchy fabric to use as ribbing around the arm holes and neck hole. Most likely you will have enough fabric left over from your shirt to cut strips out of the same material so it will match exactly. However, I wanted white ribbing, so I cut my strips from some leftover white t-shirt material. When you cut strips, make sure you are cutting with the stretch (so you can hold both ends and stretch your strip). You'll want one strip for the next that's about 1 1/2 inches wide, and two strips for the armholes that are each 1 inch wide. Twelve inches long was plenty for my dress, but if you have more fabric, you might as well cut the neckhole strip even longer, just to be sure.

white knit fabric cut into strips

Depending on your fabric your strips may start curling into themselves, like mine did (below). Don't worry about it – we need to fold them in half longways and press, and once you do they'll lay nice and flat.

white knit fabric strips curling up

Next, place your two dress pieces right sides together and sew up both shoulder seams (shown pinned below). Press the seams open.

baby dress front and back piece pinned at shoulders

We'll start by using our strips (I'm going to call it ribbing from now on) to bind the armholes. Now, since we cut this dress fairly straight, you can't tell at this point where the arm holes stop and the side seams will begin. Don't worry about it. Just start by laying your dress out flat (opened up at the shoulder seams with the right side up) and pin the middle of one of your narrow pieces of ribbing to to the dress at the shoulder seam.

dress opened at shoulder seam with strip of white knit pinned into sleeve

Now, we want to grab about half an inch of ribbing to the right of your pin and stretch it out to about a full inch length before pinning it down to the dress. Do the same to the left of your pin. When you let go of the ribbing you'll see that the dress bunches up a bit. It should look like the picture below. This will give the top of the armhole a tiny gather and make the dress look more like it has sleeves.

White knit strip pinned into edge of sleeve, bunching up fabric

Continue pinning the ribbing down on each side of your middle pin, not stretching it after that first inch. Sew it on using a 1/4 inch seam allowance. This picture shows my serger – in order to get that small of a seam allowance I have the fabric lined up with the blade and just the tiniest bit is getting cut off. If you are using a sewing machine instead of a serger (just fine!) line up the edge of your fabric with the edge of your presser foot to keep a 1/4 inch seam allowance.

sewing on white fabric strip on sewing machine

Sew that ribbing on. When you get near the shoulder seam, where we stretched the ribbing before pinning, your fabric will be all bunched up, like the picture below.

White fabric strip pinned over yellow fabric on sewing machine, yellow fabric bunched up

Pull on your fabric as you sew in order to smooth out the bunches. Remember, the ribbing will shrink back up after we sew this seam, helping to give a tiny gather to the top of the sleeve area.

white fabric strip pinned over yellow fabric on sewing machine, white fabric stretch so yellow fabric lays flat

Once you've sewn your armhole ribbing on both sides and pressed the seam allowance in toward the dress, your dress will look like this.

baby dress with finished arm holes

Now is a good time to try the dress on the intended recipient and mark two things: 1) Where you'd like the side seams to start under the arms (just pin on either the front or back, not through them both), and 2) How much larger you'd like the neck hole to be. If your baby daughter runs from you laughing maniacally as you are trying to mark these two things, know you are in good company 🙂 Either do your best, or just use that original well-fitting dress as a guide here.

baby dress with neckline pinned

Trim away at the neckline if you need to make it bigger. I originally planned to have the buttons go down the back of this dress, so I lowered the neckline on the plain portion of the dress. I changed my mind later it, and it turns out it likes fine either way. So lower the neckline in the front, or the back, or both, or not at all if you've already cut a large enough hole. Totally helpful, right?

white neckbinding pinned to center neckline

Get your wider piece of ribbing and pin it around the neckline (remember to pin the ribbing to the right side of the dress), starting in the middle of the front. This time you will stretch the ribbing every single time you pin it down. This means the dress piece will be bunched up all the way around the neckline – this will help the ribbing to lay flat once it's sewn and pressed. When you get to the buttons, curve your ribbing so the folded edge meets the corner of the dress above the button or buttonhole, as shown below.

white neckbinding pinned around button near neckline

Sew that ribbing on, remembering to stretch it the entire time as you sew so your dress fabric isn't bunched up under it. Here's another picture of it bunched up:

sewing binding that\'s pinned to dress, with fabric under binding bunched

And another picture of it smoothed out as I stretch the fabric:

sewing binding on a sewing machine, binding stretched so fabric is flat

And here's a shot of how it should look when it meets up with the buttons or buttonholes.

sewing binding on sewing machine, binding pulled off to side when it meets buttonhole

At this point you should press that seam down toward the dress, and you'll have something that is really starting to look like a dress:

finished neckline with white binding

Except around your button placket, where you'll have a bit of a mess:

excess neckbinding around button placket

Trim off that excess ribbing (cut straight down), and use a few hand stitches to secure it down to the inside of the button placket.

hand sewing binding inside button placket

Almost done! Just the side seams now. Turn your dress inside out and find the pin that marked where you want your side seam to start below the armholes. Pin in across the armhole ribbing, then down the side.

dress with side seam marked

Sew both side seams and cut off any extra ribbing below the armholes. Your dress should look like this.

finished yellow baby dress, inside out

Now you just need to turn it right side out, press open the side seams, clip off any stray threads, and wait for your baby girl to wake up from her nap so she can try it on.

baby girl wearing a yellow dress

Give her a rock to hold so she won't rip the clip out of her hair…

A small child wearing a yellow dress

Try to accept the fact that she will never, ever wear the cute hair clips you've made for her.

A little girl in a yellow dress

And chase her around with a camera to get a good shot.

A little girl standing on a sidewalk

There you have it! But wait! Did you start with a long sleeved shirt? SAVE THE SLEEVES! And check back next week…

A baby girl standing on the sidewalk

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Source: https://www.itsalwaysautumn.com/sew-baby-dress-from-womens-shirt.html

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