Maybe Matilda: Monster Hoodie Refashion Tutorial

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Monster Hoodie Refashion Tutorial

(This post was shared on My Own Road a few weeks ago--I forgot that I hadn't posted the tutorial here until this morning when I was folding laundry and came across this hoodie! I made it right before Halloween but have been really happy with the only semi-Halloweenie look; he's been wearing it since then and still gets compliments on it.)

Now, right off the bat, I'm going to warn you: I'm not one of those ladies. You know the kind, with their houses all decked out weeks in advance of every holiday, thoughtful handmade gifts to give, and clean, well-behaved children wearing home-sewn clothes (probably sewn from home-spun fabric, too). 

So I'm going to lay it all out right now: this is the only semi-Halloween-ish item in my home right now. And it's one of the only clothing items I've ever made for my little boy. And I purposely didn't make it too Halloween-ish, because I didn't want it to be limited to wear for the next week or so, so it hardly even counts as a holiday item. And, to top it off, it's dirty in the pictures (which, of course, are fuzzy). Gimme a break--he's a real boy and his clothes stay clean for all of about 20 seconds. If you're still interested and not completely turned off by my lack of mothering superpowers, maybe you'll enjoy this sneaky peeky monster hoodie refashion I pulled together for my little fella:
I have to admit, I think it's pretty cute! I bought him that hoodie on clearance recently, but he already has a few plain hoodies and I thought maybe he could use one with more character. I reverse appliqued these cute little monster heads onto it, and wild guess here, but I think he might like it!
Here's how I refashioned his little hoodie with some peekaboo monster fun!
You'll just need:
- a hoodie
- knit/jersey fabric scraps (I used squares from old polo shirts)
- sewing machine
- hot glue/fabritac
- googly eyes
- felt

I started by sketching and cutting out the monster heads on white paper. I thought it would be cute to have them "peekabooing," if I can make up that word right now, into the sweatshirt, so I drew one popping up out of the pocket and another poking out from the zipper.
Make sure your fabric scraps are a bit larger than the designs you sketched, and pin everything together. The layering, from top to bottom, should be paper, hoodie, fabric scrap.
Now sew around the shape of the pattern sketches--you're not sewing onto the paper, but using it as a shape/guide to sew around. Make sure you're sewing through both the hoodie and the fabric scrap behind it. Try not to stretch the fabric as you sew, and if you get to points or curves that are hard to navigate, just stop sewing while the needle is down in the fabric, lift up the presser foot, and swivel your fabric, then lower the foot and keep sewing. When you're finished, remove the pins and you should have a nice stitched outline of your sketch:
Here's what it'll look like from the back:
I sewed straight over a fabric fold by accident . . . whoops! No biggie--it's in the back, so I just left it. (Perfectionist? Not even a little. I can thank my mother for that--we've jokingly nicknamed her Kathleen "Goodenough" LastName.)

Now trim away the excess fabric from the back, being very careful not to accidentally cut the hoodie fabric.
This is the part that made my heart race. It's a little scary, so be cautious. Carefully, carefully, cut out the inner monster shape from the hoodie fabric. Make sure you're staying inside the stitching lines, and be very careful not to cut the scrap fabric from the back! It's easiest, I find, to pull the two fabrics apart as much as you can, and use small sharp scissors to start with a little snip in the center of the design:
Then work from there to cut the rest of the fabric away, without getting too close to your stitch line.
Add some googly eyes and teeth cut from a bit of felt, and you're all done! (I used hot glue to attach the googly eyes and felt, and time will tell if that was a poor decision or not. I'm sure something like Fabritac would hold up better in the washer and dryer, so it's possible that my son's hoodie is going to lose its facial features after the first wash. **Update! It's now been washed multiple times, and everything has held up just fine--the eyes and mouth are still firmly in place. Woohoo!**)

Such an appropriate look for him. He is seriously an adorable monster. Sometimes the emphasis is more on one of those words than the other . . . you guess which.

7 comments :

  1. That's adorable, Rachel! And it actually looks fairly simple!!

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  2. Such a cute monster hoodie. Such a cute baby.

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  3. I love this little hoodie! So stinkin' cute!!

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  4. I love that little monster and his hoodie!

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  5. Adorable! Love your disclaimer. I need to operate that way and LO won't outgrow what I start and don't finish in fear of messing up and not being able to show off my work. My Little Man won't care anyway but I beat me up and tense up worrying about messing up. Supposed to be a happy crafty pastime. I be rich selling by now if I did more with fabric I went nuts buying since learning to sew and serge last year.

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  6. Adorable! Love your disclaimer. I need to operate that way and LO won't outgrow what I start and don't finish in fear of messing up and not being able to show off my work. My Little Man won't care anyway but I beat me up and tense up worrying about messing up. Supposed to be a happy crafty pastime. I be rich selling by now if I did more with fabric I went nuts buying since learning to sew and serge last year.

    ReplyDelete

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