I had these great plans for Halloween in my head. Fancy costumes for our whole family including hand-sewn retro style dress for me. Fabulous! Until it was 3 days before Halloween and I had neither time nor a Halloween costume budget. Snap! What to do?
When I was talking through my conundrum with my husband he suggested we make K a monk. And while it sounds like an odd choice, our son does have a physique to pull it off....a cute little toddler belly and so little hair on the top of his head that he almost looks bald. It also has the added geeky appeal of it doubling as a
"Reformation Day" costume (
Luther is one of my husband's favorite movies. Ever.).
It was cheap and easy to make. Less than $10 in material and less than an hour of time. Depending on how you accessorize this, you could be a more specific character (St. Francis of Assisi? Luther? Friar Tuck from Robin Hood?), too
You'll need:
- About 1 yard of brown polar fleece (In my stash. Purchased months ago for $3.99 on sale at Jo-Ann's)
- 1 1/4 yard of upholstery cord ($4.39 at Jo-Ann's without a coupon)
- A long sleeve shirt, a pair of pants and a hooded jacket or coat that currently fit your child (for sizing the pattern pieces)
- Brown Thread
- Sewing Machine
Cut Out Your Pieces
The monk habit is only 4 pieces: a front, a back and a 2 piece hood. To cut your pieces:
1) Lay out your material, folded in half (the way it came off the bolt). Grab a long sleeve shirt and a pair of loose fitting long pants that currently fit your child and lay them out on top of the fabric.
2) Cut around the outline of the clothes. Give yourself about 1/2 inch allowance along the upper edge of the sleeves. Cut the cuff-end of the sleeve to end where the shirt sleeve ends. For the bottom edge of the sleeves and along the sides, give your self a 2 inch buffer.
When you're done, it should look something like this:
3) Remove the clothing and cut a swoop for the collar line
4) Because you had your fabric laid out double, you should now have 2 identical pieces that look like this:
5) Cut out the hood pieces by laying the hood of a coat or sweater that already fits your child on top of 2 layers of fabric so the front edge lines up with an edge like so:
Cut around the outline of the hood, giving your self 1/2 - 1 inch of buffer. Cut the bottom edge of the hood at an angle, following the line of the seam on the garment you are using for a template. Like so:
You should end up with 2 identical pieces that look like this:
Let's get Sewing!
Thread your machine with matching brown thread and set your machine to do a long, straight stitch.
Next, you'll want to decide which side of the fabric you would like to have facing out as your child wears it. My fleece had a fuzzy side (usually considered the right side) and a flat, boring side (usually considered the back side). I wanted my monk to look plain, so I chose to have the boring side out and the snuggly, fuzzy side in. Decide which side you would prefer to having showing and proceed.
1) With (what you have decided will be) the right sides together, sew the body pieces as marked with the yellow lines. Now, turn the body right-sides out so the seams are inside. optional: You may choose to hem the cuff ends of the sleeves and the hem if you would like. I chose to hem just the sleeve and leave the hem raw.
2) Next, with right sides together, sew the hood pieces as marked:
Turn the hood right-side out.
optional: The raw part of the seam will be inside the hood BUT if the hood is hanging and not on your child's head, you will see the raw seam. Decide if this bothers you. If it bothers you (it bothered me), with the raw seam turned inside the hood now (right side of the fabric facing out) sew along the same edge with a 1/4 inch seam allowance. This will contain the raw seam. Again, this is optional.
3) Attach the hood to the neckline by first inserting a pin to mark the center, back of the neck. Then lay the hood on the body, lining up the center hood seam with the pin.
Moving from the center seam out, pin the hood to the body.
With a 1/4 inch seam allowance, sew the hood to the body, removing the pins as you go.
optional: If the raw nature of this seam bothers you (it bothered me...apparently I'm neurotic), you can stitch down the inside of the raw seam with a wide zig zag stitch. Once you have stitched the seam open with the zig zag, you can trim any excess raw edges, being careful not to clip the threads.
Get Dressed.
Slip the little robe on your kiddo. Don't they look snuggly and warm? Tie a knot in each end of the upholstery cord you chose to use for a belt and wrap it around their waist. That's it! Enjoy your cute little monk!
I'm linking up with these great parties...
Love your little Luther monk!
ReplyDeletehow awesome is this!!! your little monk is soooo cute!
ReplyDeleteSo cute! I love how the bald head adds to the look. Sooo cute. thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteBrittany aka Pretty Handy Girl
super cute and neat idea for something different! Great job with the tutorial too.
ReplyDeleteThis is so cute and hilarous! How creative! Thank you for your kind comments and for following ReMadeSimple! p.s. I'm your newest follower :)
ReplyDeleteThanks for stopping by my blog, Carissa. I'm following back. This is the most adorable monk I've ever seen. He even looks saintly!
ReplyDeleteThis is so great. I am putting on a medieval play at school and will be making four of these for my middle school students. Thanks for an easy straight- forward idea. Awesome!
ReplyDelete