Thrifted Skirt to Summer Nightgown Refashion

I found this pale green and white striped knit skirt at our thrift store for $1.49.  The fabric is very soft with no pills.  It is a straight style, with few seams, in a large size. That translates to yardage :). 

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My daughter Heidi is growing so fast that her summer nightgowns from last year were too small. I welcomed a break from remodeling projects and took a few measurements, transferred them to this schematic and drafted a pattern.

Nightgown drawing

I wish I had a video elf so I could show you how easy it is to draft a knit pattern like this.  Perhaps another day?  The front and back pieces are identical.  I simply drew a fold line on a large piece of newsprint.  Then took 1/4 of the girth measurements and the exact length measurements and transferred them to the paper, connecting the side seams, neck and arm hole curves with a French ruler.  I added 3/8 inch seam allowance.  Her nightgown doesn't need extra ease because the knit fabric gives her room to move.

To prepare the skirt for recutting, I cut off the waistband and the center back seam.

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I placed the nightgown front on the fold to cut out and found that my skirt was too full to fit.  No problem, I redrew it just slim enough to fit and folded over the excess.

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Since the back of the original skirt had a seam with a kick slit, I had to add a seam to the back of my nightgown.  I just cut it out with a 3/8 inch seam down the back and serged it together. Knit has a tendancy to stretch out of shape.  To help, I lengthened the stictch and steam pressed to help it shrink back.  The first time the item is washed and dried it usually recovers it's shape.

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 To construct, I sewed the side seams.  Then turned under the arm holes 3/8 of an inch and hemmed with a cute tricot stitch.

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Then I cut 26" of 1/4" width elastic.  This was 6" for each neckline plus 8" for each shoulder strap.  I cut several 1 inch wide strips of knit from the scraps and stitched them together quilt binding style.  Then I used my longest straight stitch to sew the elastic down the middle of the wrong side of the strip stretching the elastic as I went.  When I came to the end of the elastic, I cut off the excess knit strip.

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Then I stitched the elastic strip in a circle and pinned it to my front and back neckline, centering everything.  This created a finished neck edge and the shoulder straps.  I stitched on top of the previous stitching on the necklines and left the shoulder straps free.  What a cute ruffle!

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To finish the nightgown, I used the same tricot stitch to hem the bottom, but this time I stretched the fabric as I went.  This made a nice ruffly hem with a scallop.  An alternative to the scallop hem is to add the same ruffle as around the neck.

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 Cute, Comfy, and Cost effective.  What more could a girl ask for?

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Don't forget to leave a comment; it makes me so happy :).  
 

Refashioning: The Zebra Skirt

Zebra skirt
My friend, Jamie from California, saw this skirt in a thrift store and knew it would be perfect for her friend. . .as a pillow.  The fabric has a beautiful touch to it and the lining is high quality and very silky and soft.  She packaged it all up to me with handwritten instructions.  In a few days I mailed back this:

Zebra pillow from skirt front
The lining is now a coordinating ruffle, and Jamie even had the great idea to use the tags for decoration on the front, to remind the pillow what it had been.

Zebra pillow from a skirt tag
Zebra pillow from a skirt back

 For those of you wondering if I do custom work, I used to.  I'm focusing my time right now on my kitchen remodel, my kiddoes, and new patterns to publish.  Jamie is very special.  She's the kind of girl that sends you $100 when your husband loses his job and I would do anything for her that was possible.  I didn't consider this a custom project, just a gift from one friend to another.