Frumpy Floral Dress Refashion

Frumpy Thrift Store Dress, Before

One of my biggest summer projects is cleaning out our craft room closet. I’m a bit of a hoarder, especially when it comes to craft supplies, and most of mine have been collecting dust in our spare closet since we moved in last August (side note: how is it possible we’ve been here almost a year already?!). So I’ve given myself an ultimatum for this summer. Either I put all those materials to use, or I get rid of them. One of the first projects I’ve attempted is a refashion of the dress pictured above. I originally purchased it because of the sweet floral print and pleated skirt, thinking it would be easy to shorten the hem and do something about the sick collar and sleeve situation. However, like many of my projects, it got shoved in a box, which was buried in a closet and mostly forgotten until last weekend, when I decided I needed a new dress to wear to a birthday party. So, following this pretty straightforward refasion tutorial on I Make Stuff, I chopped off the hem and made it into a ruffle to be sewn onto the neckline. After removing the collar, I decided to sew the ruffle onto the dress’s back, turing the back into the front so that it would button down the back (because, after all, a row of buttons down the back is nothing if not classy). I also chopped off the sleeves and cuffed them just above the elbow (a length I find flattering on almost anyone), and took the dress in a few inches at the bodice and waist. The dress already had a pleat on each shoulder, and I added another to keep it from falling down.

Frilly Thrift Store Dress, After

I finished it in time to wear to the party, and had Dawn take some pictures before we left the house.

While I'd hoped the tights would provide some protection for Louisiana's monster mosquitoes, I was mistaken.

After hemming the skirt, I had a hard time getting the pleats to look right, but that might be due to my lack of patience when it comes to ironing.

Because the fabric is very sheer, I wore this vintage slip underneath. Also, a skinny brown belt makes just about anything more flattering.

After wearing the dress, I think I might go back and add a couple of darts to the bodice since it was pretty baggy even after I took in the sides, but overall I’m quite happy with how the dress turned out. Someone at the party asked if my dress came from Modcloth, and I certianly took that  as a compliment.

Since completing this project, I’ve purchased a few more frumpy dresses from Goodwill (which is, I realize, completely incompatible with my goal of getting rid of things), and I can’t wait to get started on them! Do you have experience refashioning vintage and thrift store clothing? If so, please share your tips in the comments section!

Related Posts:

Bird Mobile from Spool

I’ve had this Spool Sewing Bird Mobile Tutorial bookmarked for over a year.  It’s really the perfect stash-busting craft–the birds are so small that almost any fabric scrap is usable, and it’s so easy (and free) to go outside and break off a few sticks and tie them together with string, twine, fishing line, thread–or whatever else you have on hand.  So, in honor of the April Stash Bust I ignored the trepidation I felt about a grown, childless woman having a bird mobile hanging in her house and made one of these beautiful things happen.  Thanks to my 12′ ceilings and the fact that I don’t have a ladder, it’s currently suspended from my ceiling fan, but I have the perfect corner picked out for when I manage to procure a ladder.

That's twine I used to tie the branches together.

The floral fabric is more of what I used to make the Sweet Spring Jersey Skirt, while the the orange and yellow were bought as discounted remnants, and the purple is left from a curtain I had hanging in my dorm room my freshman year.  I had the twine left over from a jewelry project I did a while ago, and I broke the sticks off of a bush in front of my house.

That round thing is what turns the light on and off.

Related Posts:

Sweet Spring Jersey Skirt

A couple of months ago I bought a lot of bright, floral jersey fabric on super discount at Dirt Cheap.  It’s been hanging out in my fabric cabinet since then, patiently waiting for Spring to kick me  in the butt.  Using The Jersey Skirt Tutorial from Ruffles and Stuff and the dimensions from my favorite and most-worn skirt of all time (bought on clearance over a year ago at a Gap after-Christmas sale), I managed to piece together this sweet spring skirt.  I’ve been itching to wear it all week, and today it’s finally warm enough!

There's some weird light happening in my hallway this time of day.

You can see the color and pattern of the skirt better in this picture.

A few things to note:

  • If, like me, you’ve never sewn with jersey before, then this simple project can prove pretty frustrating.  If you look on some of your store-bought jersey items, you’ll probably notice a two rows of stitches on the hems.  I wasn’t able to make this happen on my skirt for several reasons (I don’t have the manual to my sewing machine, it was after midnight when I was working on this skirt and didn’t want to go to the store, I am impatient), but it really does look more professional and will probably hold up better.  I’m going to learn from this and try and take those factors into account on my next jersey project.
  • I should’ve used a stretch needle, made especially for super stretchy knit fabrics like my floral jersey.  Again, I didn’t want to go to the store, so I just used what I had.  I did, however, experience a massive amount of unintentional scrunching of my fabric.  This was great around step 3 of the tutorial, when I needed to gather the skirt, but really annoying when I was sewing down the side and hemming the bottom.  A zig zag stitch may have helped with this, also.  I googled it, but had a hard time finding answers.  I guess only time and more trial and error will tell!
  • Steps 4 and 5 of the tutorial are a little confusing if you’re using a fabric with obvious right and wrong sides, unlike the one pictured.  To clarify: on step 4, the waistband should be folded in half widthwise with right sides out.  Right sides are together on step 5, as you’re sewing the skirt panel onto the waistband.
  • My skirt is, as I stated earlier, based on my favorite Gap skirt.  To get this fit, your initial measurements will be something like 11″ tall for the waistband and 16″ tall for the skirt (mine has a 1″ hem).

Related Posts: