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—lisa g.

Monday, October 22, 2012

project winter coat: custom shoulder pads

i'm not much of a shoulder pad person, but i do know that a tailored coat needs some oomph to maintain the structured shoulder you've worked so hard to achieve. i never could remember to hunt down  shoulder pads when i was at the fabric store or shopping online, so i decided to make my own. i loosely followed instructions i found in singer's "the complete photo guide to sewing" (good book, by the way. i found a copy at the library and it seems really useful!). they call for batting, but i just used more of the polar fleece i have lying around. if you use fleece, it won't be quite as structured as the stiffer batting, so just keep that in mind when you select materials.


to start, take your front and back pattern pieces and line them up at the shoulder's seam allowance. tape it together then place tracing paper on top. trace the armhole between the ease points and mark the shoulder seam. make sure to label which side is the front and which side is the back, as they are not symmetrical. then just draw a curved line up to about 1" from the neck seam.


determine how many layers of fleece/batting you need. for me, three layers gave me 3/8" which is a hair thicker than the 1/4" called for in the pattern. since fleece is more squishable than batting, it will work out perfectly.


cut each layer to be about 3/4" smaller than the one before it. make sure your shoulder seam is marked on each piece so you can line them up easily. now, curving them in your hand, make a running stitch along the straight edge to keep it all together. don't bother with knotting your threads, just take a back stitch at either end.


once you have done this, make radial stitches throughout the shoulder pad starting from the center and shaping it as you go. once you're done, your pad should hold a curve on it's own.



now cut two pieces of muslin and pin it together around the shoulder pad and trim the excess from the bottom layer so it is even. then serge or zig-zag around the rounded edge (careful to maintain the curved shape) to close it up.


on the straight edge, just whip stitch the muslin to the next layer of fleece/batting to keep it all together without squishing it down.



and there you have it... custom shoulder pads!

—lisa g.

8 comments:

  1. These look very good. Just the ticket!

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  2. Cool! And . . . am I the only one with no polar fleece laying around?

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    1. you just may be! i over-bought for a halloween costume last year... the stuff really comes in handy sometimes!

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  3. What a great tip! Thanks for the tutorial -- I will definitely do this when I need shoulder pads. All scraps = free, and yay for free. :-)

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  4. I've been wanting to try this... store bought shoulder pads always leave me cold :-/
    Yours look so neat and lovely!

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    Replies
    1. i already have rather bony shoulders so this softer shoulder pad worked perfect. plus it hardly took any time at all to make!

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