Hello Readers. I found a very unusual dress at a clothes swap. It was made of plastic. Yes. It was plastic. Well, faux leather, I guess. But Faux leather is... basically plastic. It looked a little like a graduation gown. A plastic graduation gown? I brought it home because it was so unique.
Before and after.
I turned the dress around and tried it on backwards. The neckline was more open and had cute little buttons. I could have worn it like this but I really wanted to make a raincoat. This "plastic" dress would make a great raincoat/jacket. The back of this dress will be the front of my raincoat.
I folded the dress in half and spread it flat on its side. I wanted to find the exact center of the front of the dress.
I cut the dress open in the back, which will end up being the new front. I needed to make it into a jacket that could open and close.
I got a long zipper to open and close the raincoat. This was a 24" separating zipper. It will split in 2 pieces instead of being connected at the bottom. It also had brass teeth which will be stronger than plastic.
I wanted the cut edges I made to be strong so I ran it through my serger. It was not fraying at all but I thought it couldn't hurt to do this. A zigzag stitch along the edges with a sewing machine would also work for this.
I sewed the zipper to the front. I sewed one side of the jacket opening and one piece of the zipper at a time. I used my sewing machine to attach the zipper. I sewed the zipper to the coat with the teeth facing out. Then.....
I folded the zipper under once and sewed the edge down again. This will make a clean look. I sewed the other side of the zipper the same way.
With the zipper sewn in I now had a jacket that could open and close. I also wanted to add some kind of a belt to give it a little shape.
I wasn't sure what to use to make this belt so I settled on this grosgrain ribbon. The ribbon seemed like a pretty addition.
I sewed the ribbon into the side seams of the coat. I sewed one piece across the back and 2 pieces that would wrap around the front and tie in a bow.
I didn't have belt loops to hold the ribbon so I sewed the ends of the ribbon into the side seam. I had to open the side seams with a seam ripper. I unpicked the stitches right above the pockets. I slipped the ends of the ribbons into the opening I made, lined up the edges of the jacket and the edges of the ribbon and sewed the sides back together with the ribbon.
I thought the belt added a nice touch. The black on black worked out well.
I could also tie the belt in back to keep it out of the way.
This new jacket is light-weight which is great because it is getting warmer out there. Thanks for reading along, now go make something fun for yourself.
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