When my daughter-in-law asked if I
could make my “Princess” granddaughter a mermaid costume, I was both excited
and apprehensive. I was excited because
this would be a chance to be creative again after a long illness which had
resulted in my recent retirement from my extremely stressful, strenuous, and very time-consuming
teaching job. I was apprehensive because
I had never made a costume for a little girl (I have 3 sons), and also because
I did not have a pattern.
Making A Bodice Pattern
Making a pattern was not as difficult
as I thought it would be. I used a dress
that fit my “Princess” (size 4) as a guide to cut the width of the bodice. I drew the design on the back of gift wrap; it
helped to have squares printed on the back of the paper. I drew the bodice to come to her
waist on the sides and back and extended it 4 inches in the front, creating a
“V”.
Cutting the Fabric
My princess thought my Cutting Board
would make a great castle, so I cut my fabric on my Dining Room table (protected
by poster board). She had fun!!
I allowed a ½ inch seam allowance and
an extra ½ inch on the sides so the dress could be worn over a long-sleeved
t-shirt for Trick or Treating. I used
washable yellow satin for the bodice and cut 2 sets of “backs” and 2 “fronts” so
that I could line the bodice without using a facing. I cut 2 strips for the straps (approximately
7 inches long and 1 ½ inches wide).
Sewing the Bodice
Working lengthwise, I turned the
straps under ½ inch, pressed, folded the strap to the center, turned under 3/8 inch,
and sewed a straight seam the length of the strap. I then sewed the side seams of the
bodice. I added the straps and pinned
and stitched the top and back of the bodice sections together, being careful
not to catch the straps in the seam. I
clipped the seams, pressed, and basted the bottom together.
Cutting and Sewing the Skirt
I folded the fabric for the skirt and
used the bodice as a guide for cutting. I marked the center and cut a 4 inch
“V” in the front.
I allowed
approximately 6 inches extra on the front and back. I stay-stitched on the seam
line and sewed a long stitch to shirr the fabric. **I cut the middle of the skirt to the stay-stitching line. With right sides together, I pinned and sewed
the bodice to the skirt. I finished and serged the seams as needed.
I then sewed the skirt together down
the back, leaving open from the top to about 3 inches below the waist. I attached
4 sets of Velcro down the back opening.
Adding the “Bling”
And now for the fun part!! Pearl-edged lace was added to the arm
holes, and metallic gold lace was added to the waist. Tulle was cut into large circles. A row of gathering stitches shirred the tulle
which was then sewn to the skirt in a “V” to indicate a “mermaid tail”. Metallic gold rickrack was added to cover the tulle seam and also around the bodice neck and straps.
A brooch was made by gluing seashells
to a wooden disc, and a jewelry pin back was added to the back of the brooch
The brooch was pinned to the bodice along with strips of wired sheer iridescent
ribbon.
The Starfish hair ornament was made
by gluing a Starfish to a ribbon-covered hair clip.
Tip: Glue cardboard to the
back of the Starfish before gluing it to the clip for extra reinforcement.
The “Magic”
This costume was magic for me because
it allowed me to be “creatively alive” again while doing something special for
my “Princess”! With my somewhat limited
computer skills, it was also magical that I was able to complete this
submission with photos! This costume can
also be “magically” adapted to create other costumes:
- · Princess: The ruffled tulle can be left off, and add a tiara and wand.
- · Snow White: Just reverse the costume colors to blue top/yellow bottom, leave off the “Bling” and tulle, and add a white collar.
- · Fairy: Leave off the “Bling” and tulle, and add wings.
- · Cool evenings: A long-sleeved white t-shirt can be worn underneath.
- · Add a scarf around the shoulders for a pretend “evening out”.
- · Etc. Create your own magic!!
Magical price: Since I already had most of the fabrics and
lace/trims and cut my own pattern, the cost of this costume was less than $3.00! This has been the start of many “magical costumes” that I will create!
Let the magic continue!!
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