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Sun Dress Pattern is FREE at ChellyWood.com #MonsterHighDolls #DollClothes

In a turquoise blue frame, we see the words "free pattern" plus the logo for Chelly Wood dot com beside a photo of the Freak du Chic 17 inch Gooliope Jellington doll from the Monster High doll collection. The doll wears a pretty pink sundress with floral print and a pair of blue dress shoes.

Please visit ChellyWood.com for free printable sewing patterns for making clothes to fit dolls and action figures of many shapes and all different sizes.

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For your free patterns and tutorial videos, please scroll down to the second set of bullets.

Almost exactly one month ago, I gave you this same same pattern, but for a vintage Barbie doll. Imagine my surprise, when I discovered that it also fits Gooliope Jellington, the 17 inch Monster High doll from the Freak du Chic collection!

This tutorial is unlike some of the other sundress tutorials I’ve created because it’s designed to hide your gathers inside the bodice of the dress. This makes it a little more difficult than most of my other sundress patterns. That’s why it’s marked with four flowers.

If you’d like to learn how my flower-based difficulty scale works, please click on Helpful Tips and FAQ’s.

To make this doll dress, you will need cotton fabric and because of Gooliope‘s narrow body, I recommend using a 1/2 inch (10 mm) sew-on Velcro for the bodice’s closure, instead of the Dritz size 2/0 snaps we used for the Barbie version of this dress.

Would you like to know where I got her blue shoes? Believe it or not, I discovered that my 17 inch Gooliope doll actually fits into a pair of vintage Crissy doll shoes! How cool is that? Want to buy some for your own 17 inch Freak du Chic doll? Here’s a link to help you find them.

Today’s pattern will fit these dolls:

Here are your free, printable PDF sewing patterns and tutorial videos for making the outfit shown at the top of this page:

Feel free to pinlike, or tweet about my free patterns and tutorials. If you can’t find a specific pattern, just submit a question to me directly.

Please visit ChellyWood.com for free printable sewing patterns for making doll clothes to fit dolls of many shapes and all different sizes.

Disclaimer/Credit/Affiliate Marketing Link:

*ChellyWood.com earns money by linking to Amazon, eBay, Michaels, Etsy, and other online affiliate programs. Links provided above may be affiliate links. For a full list of my affiliate programs, and to understand how cookies are used to help this website earn money, please see my “Privacy Policy” page.

To honor the trademark rights of the doll companies mentioned in this blog post, I am including links to their websites here. Please feel free to visit their website and consider purchasing one or more of the dolls mentioned.

Queens of Africa dolls are products offered by the Slice by Cake company, which holds the trademark for them (™). They were designed by Taofick Okoya. Please visit the Queens of Africa website to learn more about their company and its trademarked toys, books, and fashions.

Barbie, Tall Barbie, and Vintage Barbie dolls are products offered by Mattel, which holds the registered trademark for them (™). Please visit the Mattel Toys website to learn more about their company and its trademarked toys.

Liv dolls were products designed and distributed by the Spin Master company, which still makes dolls and toys today (although the Liv dolls are no longer in production at the time of this blog post). The Spin Master company held the trademark for the Liv Dolls (™). Please visit the Spin Master Toys and Games website to learn more about their company and its trademarked toys and games. Please be aware that the Chelly Wood animated doll is a Spin Master Liv doll that has been re-painted and had its wig colored to appear to look like the real doll clothing designer, Chelly Wood. This was done as a creative project by Chelly’s daughters, and the Spin Master Toys and Games company was not involved in the doll’s makeover in any way.

Sindy dolls were originally created by Pedigree Dolls & Toys, but they have been made by other manufacturers including Hasbro, Vivid Imaginations, and New Moon. Currently (at the time of this blog post) a limited number of the newest version of these dolls is being manufactured by Kid Kreations of Staffordshire, England. I haven’t tried my doll clothes on this newer version, but sewists have told me my Tammy doll patterns do fit the vintage Sindy dolls created by Pedigree Dolls & Toys. Please visit one of these toy companies’ websites to learn more about the toys they produce.

Ideal Toy Company owned the registered trademark for the entire Tammy family of dolls, but that company is no longer in business. I’m including links to the Wikipedia pages on these topics for anyone who would like to research these dolls.

Gooliope Jellington and the Freak du Chic collection of Monster High dolls were produced and distributed by Mattel, who still owns the registered trademark for them. Please visit the Mattel Toys website to learn more about their company and its trademarked toys.

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