shirt Dress by Kristy Howard

shirt Dress
This project was originally posted to the BERNINA Sewing Republic site
by Kristy Howard
This project takes a men’s dress shirt and transforms it into a dress made just for you! This
is a clever project that takes something old and makes it new. Wear it over your bathing suit
for a day at the beach or out to lunch with the girls. Try using two different dress shirts for an
even more interesting look. Either way, you made it and you made it look good.
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• 1 men’s dress shirt (You may use two if
you would like to add interest with different
patterns. Larger shirts will make a fuller skirt
on your dress.)
• ½ yard of lining material (If you use a larger
shirt, you may not need this.)
• Matching thread
• Ruler
• Pencil
1. Print the dress pattern, cut out the
pieces, and tape pieces together at
dotted lines.
2. Cut the sleeves off the shirt at
the seam lines.
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3. Lay the body of the shirt on a flat
surface and use a ruler and a pencil to
draw a straight line across the chest.
Make this line well above the pocket
and right below a button. Every shirt
is different, so take some time to think
about where the ideal place to cut would
be. The bottom of this piece will become
the skirt of your dress. Cut through both
layers of the shirt along this line. Set the
bottom/skirt piece aside.
4. Cut the cuffs off the sleeves and
then cut along the sleeve seam so
that the sleeve can be opened and will
lay flat.
5. Lay out the pattern pieces for
the dress front and the strap on the
sleeves. I chose to use the placket
detail on my straps, but you can omit
this if you like.
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6. Cut the dress back pattern piece out
of the top part of the shirt you cut off.
7. Cut the dress front and dress
back out of the lining fabric. My shirt
was big enough that I had room for
the lining to be cut out of the same
material as the dress.
Sew the darts in all the front pieces,
including the lining.
All seam allowances are 5/8".
8. With right sides together, sew the
lining fronts to the front pieces around
the front edges and armhole edges. Clip
the curved edges. Turn the fronts right
side out. Press.
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9. With right sides together, sew the
back pieces together along the top
edge. Turn the back right side out
and press.
10. Sew the side seams by opening
up the front and back pieces and
placing them right sides together,
matching the seams. Sew together
so the raw edges are all contained
between the lining and outside
fabric pieces.
11. Sew the strap to the top of the
front as shown in the photo.
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12. Fold the strap in half, right sides
together, and stitch.
13. Turn strap right side out and
press. Repeat for the second strap.
14. If there is fabric missing at the
upper corners of the skirt, such
as where sleeves may have been
inserted, you'll need to trim a strip of
fabric away from the top edge. Use a
ruler and pencil to mark a straight line
across the shirt, just under the corner
cutouts. Sew two rows of basting
stitches along the top edge of the skirt
(the lower part of the shirt).
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15. Gather the upper edge of the skirt
to fit into the waistline of the top. Pin
the skirt to the outside of the top only,
with right sides together. Stitch.
16. Pull out the basting stitches. Turn
the waist of the bodice under ½” and
pin in place so that all the raw edges
are contained between the lining and
outside fabric. Topstitch from the
outside of the bodice, ⅛” from the
waistline seam.
17. Make a buttonhole in the dress top
in line with the buttonholes on the skirt.
Sew a button from the discarded part of
the shirt on the opposite side of the top
to match this buttonhole.
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18. Pin the straps in place on the
top back pieces. You may want to try
the dress on at this point and have
someone help you arrange the straps
where you want them. Mine ended
up 4” from the side seams. Stitch the
straps in place.
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Kristy Howard for Sewing Republic
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shirt dress
front
cut 2
lining cut 2
shirt dress
strap
cut 2
front
back
shirt dress
back
cut 1
lining cut1