I know, finally!! I successfully made a 2 day re-do tutorial take over a month. After the entire mishap with my first one and the drag it turned out to be I just couldn’t bring myself to look at it for a while. A long while. I torture you no more and this one is here to stay!
If you make one or mention it please link back and give credit. If you’d like to sell what you make from my tutorial -do it- and I hope you make millions. Please don’t sell or steal my tutorials or the patterns from my tutorials. Only bad people do that and I’m sure the blog police will hunt you down or the stores will be out of chocolate the next time you really need some.
The pattern for the yoke is a little girls size 4/5 to 8/10 and can be reduced or enlarged for other sizes. I’m just going to give the measurements for those sizes today because that’s what I’ve figured out so far.
You’ll need-
Chevron yoke pattern (it should print 4” wide for all sizes)
3/4 yard fabric for main body front and back
1/4 yard fabric for the top yoke and straps.
1 piece of 1/4” elastic
A ruler and fabric marker/pencil and basic sewing supplies. This tutorial works best using a 1/2” seam allowance.
*Cutting Measurements*
For all sizes cut 2 strips of fabric 1 1/2” x 22” for the straps and cut out 2 yoke pieces out of your 1/4 yard fabric. Cut your elastic half the length of the largest measurement of your Body Back fabric. For a size 4/5 you would cut your elastic 11” long and so forth.
For the main body front and back you’ll cut two rectangles according to the size you need below from your 3/4 yard fabric choice.
Body Front Piece cut Body Back piece cut
Size 4/5 - 16” x 22” 13” x 22”
Size 6/7 - 18” x 24” 15” x 24”
Size 8/10 - 20” x 26” 17” x 26”
1. Take your front body piece and fold it in half lengthwise. Using your ruler measure and make a mark 1 1/2” from the middle of the fold down. Cut your fabric from the mark to the top corner on the outside edge of the fabric. When you open your fabric back up it should have a slight “v” cut out of the top like so-
2. Sew a gathering stitch along the top edge of the front piece (along the “v” cut out edge). Mark the center of your “v” of the front piece with a pin. Pin one yoke piece right sides together to the body piece matching the center of the “v” to the bottom point of the yoke. Pin the bottom edge of the yoke to the top edge of the body piece and pull the threads to gather. Evenly distribute the gathers and pin some more.
3. Sew along your gathered edge. Turn right side out and press the gathered seam towards the yoke. Looking good so far! Fold one top strap piece right sides together and sew up the side seam and one end to make a tube. Do this for both straps. Turn right side out and press each flat. Pin the straps with the raw edge meeting the top edge of your yoke with the right side facing you about a 1/2” from the outside edges of the yoke.
4. Take your second yoke piece and place it right sides together with the other yoke piece, sandwiching the straps in the middle. Pin in place. Mark (or use a pin to mark) on the wrong side of the second yoke where your body piece seam is gathered underneath on each side. Sew 1/2” seam around the outside edge of your “sandwich” starting from your mark along the top edge of the yoke, make sure not to catch the loose strap bits in your stitching. Stop when you get to your mark on the opposite side. *You do not want to sew the 2nd yoke piece to the gathered body front piece at all yet- just yoke to yoke*.
5. Turn the entire yoke right side out and press. Fold up the bottom raw edge of your inside yoke piece about 1/4” and press towards the inside. Your inside yoke piece edge should cover the gathered inside seam of your body piece.
6. Fold the outside edges of your body piece 1/4” to the inside and press. Fold the hem over again another 1/4” and pin. Make sure your side seam of the Body fabric matches the seam sewn into the yoke so the inner yoke covers it but doesn’t go over the outside edge of it. Pin the side seams about 1/3 the way down from the bottom of the yoke to the bottom of the shirt. We’ll sew that up in step 9 so just leave it for now.
7. Pin the folded edge of your yoke on the inside over the gathered seam of the body front piece. Flip your top over right side out and topstitch along the inside edge of the yoke top, making sure to catch the inside yoke underneath.
8. Grab your Body Back piece and fold the top edge over 1/4” and press. Fold over again 1/2” and press. This is your casing for the elastic. Thread your elastic through the casing and pin at each edge. You can sew your elastic down at the very outside edges if you’d like to make it easier to do the next step.
9. Pin the body back to the body front matching bottoms and side seams with the elastic edge near the top. Sew the sides from the bottom to the top of the elastic. You should have your pressed edge the rest of the way to the yoke from step 6, refold that if you need to then sew that edge. Everything should be nice and tidy but if it isn’t don’t stress, it’s the armpit section anyway. Turn under the bottom edge 1/2” and press then turn under 1/2” again and press to finish the bottom hem. Stitch.
Done!
I love adding a contrasting band of fabric to the bottom, and normally I do but this one just didn’t want it. Feel free to play with it and make it your own. Embellish away and change up the length, this is tunic length so shorten it to get a shirt type top or lengthen for a dress. I’m making a few dresses next… I think. As always… if you make one show me!
I love your blog it is so inspiring! i was looking at old posts and came across the apples, i saw alot of women ask if you used a pattern but didnt see an answer, did you? and if so, which one? thanks for your help. Sue
ReplyDeleteYay, Yay, Yay! I love this but I am thinking I may alter the patter a little and make it a top for my little one! Maybe I will get the time this week :)
ReplyDeleteThis is so adorable! Thanks for sharing this top.
ReplyDelete-Crystal
SO adorable...thanks for taking the time out to do this!
ReplyDeleteAwesomeness!! Thanks for all the details.
ReplyDeleteI love you. I'm think that I should subtract 2" off the main body both length and width for a 2/3 size. I'll let you know!! Hoping to get to this in the next couple of days. It is adorable!
ReplyDeleteLoving it!! Welcome back!
ReplyDeleteThis is so cute! I linked on my Treasures for Tots Facebook Fan page!
ReplyDeletehttp://www.facebook.com/#/pages/Treasures-for-Tots/189979926301?ref=ts
Thanks so much for taking the time to do the tutorial! This apron top is definitely on mt list of things to try.
ReplyDeleteThis top is so cute! I found your blog through One Pretty Thing and will definitely be checking it regularly now. I love the fabrics you chose as well!
ReplyDeleteI linked on my Treasures for Tots blog sidebar as "Today's Project"!
ReplyDeletehttp://treasuresfortots.blogspot.com/
What size are the yoke pieces?
ReplyDeleteI :heart: Bridget at Everyday Chaos. What a lovely, lovely pattern!!!!
ReplyDeleteyou're too nice. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteAND nice name signage. :)
It's gorgeous! Thanks for doing a tutorial. I cannot wait to try it!
ReplyDeleteSOOO cute!!! Love it!
ReplyDeleteAnother great tutorial! Thanks!
ReplyDeletehttp://mamassparetime.wordpress.com/2010/04/19/apron-shirt/
I love the combination of fabrics here. So pretty!
ReplyDeleteThanks so much - this tutorial is fantastic! I made this beautiful top for my daughter Daisy and she loves it - it's the first project I've ever sewn from scratch so the detailed instructions and pictures were really useful! :)
ReplyDeleteI am going to try this with a little modification to make my daughter some dresses form her daddies old uniforms......I hope ot be able to do as great a job as you.....thank you
ReplyDeletefinally! i made one! i love how it turned out :)
ReplyDeletehttp://i58.photobucket.com/albums/g249/mfnusz/Gallery/IMG_1651-1.jpg
Thanks so much for sharing the tutorial, i can't wait to make one.
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing your tutorial! It is wonderful!
ReplyDeleteAnd.... love your warning about stealing the tutorial for sale! Especially the part about chocolates! That's a very serious threat! LOL~! (^_^)
such a great tutorial. I love it. I linked it up on my blog. check out all my free tutorials
ReplyDeletehttp://callmecraftymomma.blogspot.com/
Love how mine turned out!
ReplyDeletehttp://kyromaniac.blogspot.com/2010/11/creativity-let-loose-continued.html
What size are the yoke pieces? 4 inches wide top to bottom, side to side, side to side unfolded??? I'm confused. I think mine printed out way toooooo big. Please help!
ReplyDeletewonderful tutorial! I've posted it on my blog, The Handmade Experiment in a Must Make Monday post - http://wp.me/pkcUM-DO
ReplyDeleteSOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO CUTE! thanks for the tute!
ReplyDeleteTaylor
www.maryjanesandgaloshes.com
So cute! I featured this tutorial in a kids summer clothing sewing tutorials post on my blog, The Handmade Experiment http://wp.me/pkcUM-Hr.
ReplyDeleteThanks!
I have tried to tweak this several different ways to print out the yoke with a 4 inch width. Every time it prints out as 5.5 inches deep and 8 inches wide! Can anyone help? I'm dying to finish this project and put it on my little girl by Saturday!
ReplyDeleteCan anyone who has made this possibly give a little insight to the measurements of the printed yoke? I know that it says "4 inches wide", but my printed version was 8 inches wide and 5.5 inches deep. Should I be printing at 50%? Did anyone else have this problem?
ReplyDeleteThis is so awesome! I love it, made it already and blogged about it here: http://styledstitch.blogspot.com/2011/07/too-cute-for-words.html . Thank you for sharing such an awesome tutorial!
ReplyDeleteI made this dress a few different ways after finding it on Pinterest and I LOVE it!! Thank you for taking the time to type out the easy-to-follow directions :-) You rock!
ReplyDeleteI just love it!!
ReplyDelete