Acute How-To: Simple Sew – Pillow Case Dress

I made this little dress for my niece and it was so easy….just like all my other sewing projects.


In addition to being a simple sewing project, it was also very inexpensive because I was able to find all my supplies at the thrift store.  The total cost of this dress was $3 + about 45 minutes of my time – totally my kind of how-to project!

What you will need:

  • one standard pillowcase
  • about 28” of double fold bias tape in any color you prefer
  • 2 pieces of ribbon, each at 45”
  • thread
  • sewing machine

Step One:

Wash and dry your pillowcase and lay it out flat on your work table.  Cut off the closed end of the pillow case so that you have a 24” long case.  Depending on the size of the child you are making this dress for, you might need to narrow the pillow case by cutting an inch or two off each long side and re-sewing the seams.

Step Two:

Fold the case over and cut out arm holes {they will be about 8” long and 4” wide}.  I marked mine with a sharpie before cutting.  The marker lines will be covered with the bias tape, so don’t worry about them.

Step Three:

Place your double fold bias tape over the edges of the cut arm holes and pin into place.  Sew the bias tape and repeat this process on the other arm hole.

Step Four:

Fold down about ½” of the top part of the front of the dress {the neck hole} and iron.  Sew into place.  Repeat this step on the back of the dress.

Step Five:

Attach a safety pin to the end of one of your pieces of ribbon and thread it through the front neck hole seam.  Repeat on the back neck hole seam.  Tie the two ribbon ends into a bow.

{Note, I made my dress for a 3-4 year old sized child and ended up having to narrow the dress – the original 18” wide pillow case was too big.  I ended up take about an inch off each side for a better fit.  Depending on the size of the girl you are making this for you might be able to leave the pillow case as is or you might have to take off a few more inches.}

michael phelps, a little black dress, and ecodesign

LZR LBD

This little column of mine here, “Reduce, Reuse, Reimagine,” is a column about the ways in which creativity and ecological concerns intersect. I’m interested in the ways in which designers, artists, and makers impose constraints on themselves when they choose to be eco-friendly, and I’m interested in the ways in which these constraints promote real innovation and creativity.

And I feel like I probably should be quite pleased with the tidbit I’m bringing you this week, except I’m sorta not.

If you will, think back to 2008 when Michael Phelps destroyed world records in his fancy-schmancy Speedo LZR swimsuit. Oh, you know. The one that kind of made him look like a wet seal, or maybe Aquaman?

Well, those suits? They’re no longer allowed. The world governing body of swimming, FINA, said no go. And there sat poor Speedo with a pile of amazingly fast swimsuits and no pool to put them in.

Rather than simply toss them into the waste bin, Speedo teamed up with British design collective From Somewhere, a fashion label known for its use of textile waste in its own production process. The result? A sleek little black cocktail dress that debuted at London’s Estethica Fashion Week this fall.

And the thing is? I actually kind of love the dress. There’s something extremely appropriate about it – using swimsuits to create a cocktail dress. There’s also a bit of irony — making the almost-universally flattering LBD out of the equally almost-universally unflattering swim suit. And I do like that Speedo and From Somewhere are going to actually manufacture and sell the dresses in order to use up the excess LZR suits – I mean, if you’re going to come up with a concept like this, you better actually follow through.

But what I’m stuck on is this: it’s kind of driving me nuts that Speedo commissioned a cocktail dress for a big-time fashion show when there were probably much more useful ways to deal with all that excess. It seems much more like a publicity stunt than a real attempt at, well, anything. It doesn’t change anything about Speedo’s own manufacturing practices. It doesn’t encourage responsible reuse of their waste products. It doesn’t use the excess suits to create anything that might solve a problem or fill a need.

Am I crazy for being so critical? Am I just being cynical?

What will you teach the new generation about creativity?

What will you teach the new generation about creativity?

Answer in the comments below or play along with We Scout Wednesday and leave your response on your own blog, Twitter update, Facebook wall, or Flickr stream. Link back to this post (http://www.scoutiegirl.com/2010/10/creativity-new-generation.html) and then insert the direct link to your response in the Mister Linky below.

When you’re done, click through other Scouts links and find a few new friends!




{ girls dress by mette via papernstitch }

put your thinking cap on :: weddings

short chiffon wedding dress by claire la faye
wedding gown by claire la faye

i wanted to give you a heads up that this week’s we scout wednesday is all about weddings! btw, we scout wednesday is the opportunity to post on a given theme each week and share your link on scoutie girl. i’ve been looking for an excuse to share some pics from my wedding and this seems like a good time. so put your thinking caps on – posts could be about your own wedding, wedding appropriate products you make, your love story, why you’re never getting married… the sky’s the limit!

i’ll also be sharing some items that make me wish i could do it all again. okay, well, maybe not quite – but you know what i mean.

get your post ready for wednesday and then link up!

by the way, i just love the look of a short wedding dress. flirty – fun – and perfectly modern.

planning a green wedding? gowns by threadhead

threadhead - eco-friendly wedding dress

wedding season is just around the corner. i didn’t have a big frilly wedding (btw, i’m totally posting pics of my own wedding soon, just because) but there is just something so inspiring about wedding design. it’s all about details, a heightened sense of reality, and joy – pure joy.

i stumbled upon these gowns by threadhead while watching the “recently listed” items flash buy on etsy. they are constructed from sustainable, organic, or otherwise eco-friendly materials such as organic cotton, unbleached chiffon, and hemp! the gowns range in price from $700 to $1200 – which i think is a great price for sustainable design & handmade quality!

threadhead - ecofriendly wedding gown

for more inspiration & beautiful gowns, click through to threadhead!