My 3 year old daughter and I tend to disagree on her clothes. She wants to wear pink and sparkles and princess dresses every day, while I prefer more modern little girl’s clothes that include colors like navy blue, grey, and gold. And sometimes when I make her dresses that I think are beautiful, like the pretty mint green sweater dress I made recently, she’s not as happy about wearing them as I’d like. So I decided to make her a dress I knew she’d LOVE – a pretty polka dot dress with a ballet style skirt. This was a pretty easy project as sewing goes because I started with a long sleeved tee from Target and just added the elastic waistband and skirt. Here’s how:
Gather your supplies: a t-shirt that fits, enough soft elastic to go around the wearer’s waist, 1/2 yard of knit material, and 1 yard of tulle. I used a “jet-set” knit from Joann’s because it’s lightweight and a little slippery, so it won’t get bunched up under the tulle. I got my tulle from Joann’s as well – it was called foiled tulle and was more expensive than regular tulle, but quite a bit softer as well, plus it has a subtle sheen.
I started by getting all my pieces cut out (see photo below). I sliced off the bottom of the t-shirt at my daughter’s natural waist, which was about 4 inches below the armpit. Then I cut a piece of elastic long enough to go all the way around the bottom of the t-shirt, plus 1 inch for seam allowance. Next I cut two underskirt pieces from the knit. At the top the underskirt pieces are the same width as the shirt plus 1 inch for seam allowance, and then I just angled out in an A-line shape. I cut it long enough to reach from my daughter’s waist to just above her knees. (I actually cut the skirt a little short, so she usually wears this dress with tights underneath. Learn from my mistake and cut it longer than you think you need!)
Finally, I cut four rectangles out of the tulle for a double-layer overskirt. The rectangles were each about 36 inches wide, and two inches longer than the knit.
To put the dress together I started by sewing the ends of the elastic together to form a loop, which was the same size as the bottom of the shirt. I slid the elastic up over the bottom of the shirt (overlapping by about 1/2 an inch) and sewed in place using a zigzag. It looked like this:
Next, I put together the underskirt and overskirt as shown below (more explanation after the graphic).
1. Sewed the two underskirt pieces together down the sides, backstitching at the bottom. Press seams open and turn right side out. 2. Sew two overskirt pieces together down the sides, backstitching at the bottom. Press seams open and turn right side out. Repeat with the two remaining overskirt pieces to make 2 layers. 3. Place one overskirt layer inside the other and treat them as one layer. Run a gathering stitch (long stitch at low tension) along the top of the overskirt, then pull the bobbin threads to gather until the overskirt is the same width as the underskirt. Place underskirt inside overskirt and pin together along the top.
Then you can slide about 1/2 inch of the skirts under the elastic and pin it all together VERY WELL. Use a zig zag stitch to sew the skirts onto the elastic. This can get a little tricky, so be sure you use lots of pins and go slow. The good news is once the skirts are on, the dress is done! Neither the knit or the tulle will fray, so you don’t need to hem either skirt.
Here’s what it looks like all put together:
My daughter is convinced she’s a ballerina every time she puts this dress on!
Lauren says
Would you be able to machine wash this dress? I didnt know how the tulle would hold up. Im wanting to make a dress similar to this. So cute! 🙂
autumn says
I used the foil tulle, which is more expensive than normal tulle (and it’s much softer as well) and it’s held up beautifully! She wears hers at least once a week so it’s probably already been washed 10 times and it looks as good as new. The raw edge isn’t fraying at all. I was a little worried about how it would hold up, so I’ve been really pleased. I don’t know if the cheap $1/yd tulle would hold up as well or not. Thanks!
Emily says
I love this! So darling, thank you!
Brittany says
I have a confession. I’d love to make this for myself! (I was a ballet and polka dot girl when I was your daughter’s age, so she may never grow out of it…haha) How much fabric do you think you’d need for an adult sized skirt? Thanks for the great tutorial!
autumn says
hmm…I’m not really sure. Let’s think through it. I made my daughters skirt about 3 times the width of the shirt (so the front of her shirt was about 12 inches across and I used two front skirt pieces at 36 inches wide and two back skirt pieces at 36 inches wide). So maybe you could figure out dimensions for an adult sized skirt that way. I did use foil tulle, which is more expensive, but it’s softer and lays a lot nicer – if you use the normal old cheap tulle there’s a good chance that much tulle gathered up will poof out from the waistband and might not look great. You might want to look at this tulle skirt tutorial: http://www.cottonandcurls.com/2014/01/very-simple-tulle-skirt-tutorial/ She makes a circle skirt with the tulle so it lays flatter. You could do the same thing, just without quite so many layers. Good luck!
Kathy says
It turned out super cute.
Grammy J says
I get such a kick out of your daughter’s ornery grin. This was too cute
autumn says
Thanks! We get a kick out of her too 🙂 even when she’s completely ornery!
kathleen says
I just loved this and I know exactly what you mean as too daughters attitudes but after 4 daughters 2 stepdaughters and 5 granddaughters they will be who they are every single one of them hahahha but do you know what they secretly love what we make and do for them.