DIY: Cecilie Bahnsen quilted coat

Quilted coats have such a soft and lush warmth, but when it comes to quilting in a custom design… ain’t nobody got time for that! Ever since I made a long coat out of a sleeping jacket I’ve been ruminating on how to further take advantage of existing batting and quilted patterns. Enter, the perfect thrift blanket for an easy $13.

I showed this plain briefly in the video, but this is where I made my notes on sizing and assessed how many fabric panels were needed. Drawing the design has also been a helpful way for me to observe details that I might not notice from looking at a photo, such as recognizing that every single seam needed a bias tape binding and that the coat was secured via two tied ribbons. I am no good at fashion drawings, so I use the dotted line fashion model stationary from Fashionary (discount code: WITHWENDY) as a guide and it always turns out nice. Here’s what all my numbers meant in case you’d like to replicate my size S/M coat!

Upper body (purple in my grid drawing): height of front and back panels (0.5 m), width of front and back panels (0.62 m)

Sleeves (pink in my grid drawing): height of sleeves (0.4 m), width of sleeves (0.76 m), final circumference of wrist opening (0.32 m)

Skirt (green in my grid drawing): height of skirt (0.55 m), width of skirt (1.5 m)

Bias tape (blue in my grid drawing): width of tape (5 cm), length of tape (roughly 24 m)

These are the steps I followed in my video:

  1. Cut out the back piece and two front pieces

  2. Sew them together at the shoulders, wrong sides together

  3. Add bias binding along the shoulders

  4. Cut out the two sleeves

  5. Add a basting stitch to the sleeves top edge and gather

  6. Sew sleeves to the armholes, wrong sides together

  7. Add bias binding along the armholes

  8. Cut out the three large skirt rectangles

  9. Cut out four pocket pieces

  10. Pair up the pocket pieces and sew RIGHT sides together

  11. Sew pockets to the skirt fronts

  12. Baste all the skirt pieces and gather along the top edge

  13. Attach skirt pieces to the fronts and one back, wrong sides together

  14. Add bias binding along the waist

  15. Seal the left and right sides shut, wrong sides together, but take care to navigate the pockets

  16. Trim the collar, bottom, and sleeves as needed

  17. Add bias binding along the left and right side, skipping the back half of each pocket

  18. Add extra bias binding to complete the back half of each pocket

  19. Add bias binding along the entire perimeter

  20. Gather the sleeve opening

  21. Add bias binding along the sleeve opening

  22. Sew 6 ribbons

  23. Add ribbons to inside and outside for tying, one tie on the inside (2 ribbons), and two ties on the outside (4 ribbons)

Photos by Anthony Nusca:

 
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DIY: Tulle Dress (H&M x Giambattista Valli)