
Please scroll down to the second set of bullets for the free printable PDF sewing patterns and links to all additional relevant tutorial videos.
As I’ve said in previous blog posts, today’s shirt pattern will fit vintage Skipper dolls if you use felt (which is typically quite stretchy) as your fabric. There are no seam allowances around the neck, arm holes, and at the bottom of the shirt, so it’s really only designed to be used with felt, which won’t require any hemming.
You can sew your pedal pusher (or capri) pants out of cotton, cotton-polyester blends, denim, and many other fabrics as well.
Today’s free patterns will fit the following dolls:
- Monster High female dolls
- 8 inch Bratz dolls
- Ever After High dolls
- Kuu Kuu Harajuku dolls (9 and a half inch)
- Spin Master La Dee Da dolls (it fits loosely)
- Mattel’s 9 inch Stacie dolls
- Hasbro World of Love vintage dolls
Here are the free printable PDF doll clothes sewing patterns for making today’s pants and top combo outfit along with the tutorial videos you’ll need for your instructions:
- Free, printable PDF sewing pattern for making the shirt (use View A, B, C bodice pieces)
- Free tutorial video showing you how to make the shirt (uses a slightly different pattern, but instructions are the same)
- Free, printable PDF sewing pattern for making the pants
- Tutorial video showing how to make the pants
- Chelly’s whipstitch tutorial
- Tutorial video showing how to sew snaps on fabric
Are you wanting to buy some snaps for your doll clothes? I highly recommend Dritz snaps size 1/0 for this felt shirt project.
It’s always friendly and kind to show your appreciation for my free patterns and tutorials by liking them on Facebook, pinning them on Pinterest, and/or tweeting about them. You’re also welcome to add any of my YouTube channel‘s videos to your playlists. Please visit those links for easy access to my patterns, tutorials, and blog posts.
Here’s another image for easy pinning on Pinterest:

Credit:
Stacie, vintage Sunshine Family, Kuu Kuu Harajuku, Monster High, and Ever After High 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.
Bratz dolls are products offered by MGA Entertainment, which holds the registered trademark for them (™). Please visit the MGA Entertainment website to learn more about their company and its trademarked toys.
Spin Master La Dee Da dolls are products offered by Spin Master, which holds the registered trademark for them (™). Please visit the Spin Master website to learn more about their company and its trademarked toys.
World of Love is a product that was once owned and distributed by Hasbro, which holds the registered trademark for these retired toys (™). Please visit the Hasbro Toy website to learn more about their company and its trademarked toys.
This is so super cute!!
I love your patterns, and I thank you SO much for letting us use them. I was just wondering, do you plan on making patterns for 1:12 scale Phicen TBLeague figures? Specifically the female versions. I’m new to making clothes for this scale, and I’m having a difficult time adjusting other patterns to fit.
It’s fine if you don’t plan to, I just thought it couldn’t hurt to ask, and I could keep an eye out if you do. ^_^ I know eventually, I’ll figure it out.
Again, I thank you SO much for all you do. You’ve been a great help in learning to make clothes in miniature.
Hi Shari. I do not own any Phicen dolls or action figures, but I do own (and design doll clothes for) a 1:12 Breyer Rider. She probably has a figure similar to your Phicen dolls. You can see if those doll clothes work for you.
Here’s a link to my 1:12 scale Breyer Rider patterns: https://wp.me/p1LmCj-GjR
I’m also planning to post a very pretty dress project for these dolls on October 5th. Watch for that new pattern too. It will also likely fit your Phicen doll.
I recommend making the purple felt dress first, just to see if these patterns are a close fit. Felt is extremely flexible fabric, so if the bust of your doll is larger than the Breyer Rider’s bust, your fabric will have a little more “give” with felt. But you may need to alter the patterns a bit to make room for your Phicen doll’s bust, if that turns out to be the case.
Best of luck to you!
Thank you so much for getting back to me. I was looking at those, and they are on my list to try. I’ve tried reducing Barbie patterns, but haven’t mad much luck getting those right.. hehe I won’t give up though. I appreciate all your help.
With regard to “reducing Barbie patterns,” that’s one of the things I’ll be teaching in my Creative Spark class. I use a mathematical formula that’s pretty close to fool-proof!
But the first Creative Spark class will be about pattern alteration. I think I’ll save the enlarging/reducing patterns information for a later class. Maybe this spring? We’ll see. It might be summer before I have time to create all the videos for that class.
But if you have an interest in that class, you’ll easily hear about it by either subscribing to my YouTube channel (ChellyWood1) or following this blog.
Thank you for leaving your friendly comments! Let me know how your projects turn out!
Sounds great. I look forward to it. ^_^