How to Alter a T-shirt Pattern, to Make a Crop Top w/McCall’s Crafts 5462 Doll Clothes Patterns #DollClothes #SewingPatterns

A doll with a pale complexion, long, straight black hair, brown eyes, and pink lipstick stands in a room with a purple wall and a wooden floor. She's a Mattel Barbie doll with Asian facial features. She stands at a slight angle to the photographer, which exposes the side seam of her boatneck T-shirt. She also wears a pair of stretch denim, skinny leg jeans and a pair of white plastic sneakers. The Chelly Wood dot com logo appears in the lower left corner of this image.
Please visit ChellyWood.com for free printable PDF sewing patterns and tutorial videos for making doll clothes to fit dolls of many shapes and all different sizes.

Before I begin today’s blog post, let me say that I’m definitely feeling better. I’ve been sick with West Nile Virus, which is why my blog posts for my website had been put on “back burner” for a while. But I want to reach out to all of you who have kept me in your prayers…

Thank you so much! Your comments on my website were inspiring, and I guarantee that your prayers were heard!

Text at the top of the image says "on the mend" and behind the photo at the center of this image, we see tiny flowers strung together, a silk flower, and various color blocks. The photo shows a woman's hand draping down from a hospital bed. The hand has an IV taped to it. This is not an actual photo of Chelly Wood's hand, but very representative of what she was going through as she searched for a diagnosis for her illness. She spent two days in the emergency room before it was discovered that she has West Nile Virus. The heading "on the mend" is hopeful, as are the flowers. Please keep doll clothing designer and YouTuber Chelly Wood in your thoughts and prayers as she recovers from this deadly virus.
Please visit ChellyWood.com for free printable PDF sewing patterns and tutorial videos for making doll clothes to fit dolls of many shapes and all different sizes.

And now, let’s look at today’s Barbie sewing project.

The jeans my Barbie is wearing in the image at the top of today’s blog post were made using my own jeans pattern, which can be easily downloaded for free as a PDF, right here.

But today I want to talk about how I altered this T-shirt pattern, making it a high-low crop top, using McCall’s Crafts pattern number 5462 (a Barbie wardrobe from the 1980’s).

The image shows a quilted frame surrounding a photo of the McCall's doll clothes pattern number 5462 for Barbie and other 11 inch fashion dolls. An arrow points from the view G pattern for a T-shirt to a modern Barbie wearing a cropped-front tee shirt with side slits. The text above these images says, "T-shirt alteration." The Chelly Wood dot com logo appears in the lower right corner of the image.
Please visit ChellyWood.com for free printable PDF sewing patterns and tutorial videos for making doll clothes to fit dolls of many shapes and all different sizes.

Sometimes I hear people say in sewing forums, “I wouldn’t buy that pattern. It’s outdated.” Clearly these are sewing enthusiasts who have not yet learned how to make alterations.

This week I’m going to show you how I took the pattern for the boatneck T-shirt in View G of McCall’s Craft doll clothes pattern 5462 and modernized it, to look more like a fashionable, boxy crop-top tee, like what we tend to see in stores today:

A Barbie doll with long black hair models a T-shirt that has no seamline connecting the shirt's sleeve to the shirt's bodice -- rather, it's all one piece of fabric. the front of the doll's tee shirt is slightly more cropped than the back of the doll's t-shirt, and the front and back pieces are separated by not only a side seam, but also a very small slit at the side of the doll's shirt. The boatneck front of the shirt creates a smooth, dart-less feature to the front of the shirt, making this a very easy garment to sew. The doll wears jeans under the T-shirt, but we can't see her lower legs or her head, allowing the viewer to focus on the Tee and its design. The Chelly Wood dot com logo appears in the lower right corner of the photo.
Please visit ChellyWood.com for free printable PDF sewing patterns and tutorial videos for making doll clothes to fit dolls of many shapes and all different sizes.

The pattern instructions, themselves, explain how you alter the long-sleeved shirt pattern, to make it a shorter sleeve. When I make alterations, I usually read the instructions, but I seldom follow them.

In the image below, you can see that I’ve ignored how the pattern says, “For View G Cut Away Here,” and instead, I’ve folded the pattern back along the cut line (see purple arrow). This will make it so you can re-use the pattern for a long-sleeved shirt later on.

In this image, a doll's shirt pattern has been pinned to off-white jersey fabric, and the pattern has been pinned at a slight angle to the fold of the fabric. A purple arrow points at the sleeve, which is folded in toward the neckline. A yellow arrow points at the cut line for the neck opening. A white arrow points at the bottom of the shirt front. A red arrow points at the stitches just under the arm. A pink arrow points at the excess fabric at the shirt's front. The Chelly Wood dot com logo appears in the corner of this photo.
Please visit ChellyWood.com for free printable PDF sewing patterns and tutorial videos for making doll clothes to fit dolls of many shapes and all different sizes.

Before I started to cut this shirt out, I actually moved the pattern and re-pinned it, allowing for even more room in the back of the garment. So, do you see how the pink arrow points at the excess fabric in the fold? Well I ended up giving it that extra room in both the center front and the center back before I was done.

Then I folded the front section where the white arrow points at an imaginary blue line. This allowed me to created that cropped front area. I used my fabric pencil to mark the side seam, at about where the red arrow points. This showed me where my slit would start.

Now, I haven’t mentioned the yellow arrow. When we widen the center front and center back, we have to be careful that we don’t cut too deeply into the neckline.

This is a close-up photograph of a modern Barbie doll with Asian facial features, light brown eyes, and bright pink lipstick. The doll wears an off-white or ivory colored T-shirt. The doll's tee shirt's neckline is the typical almond-shaped neckline of a boatneck T-shirt. The Chelly Wood dot com logo appears in the upper left corner.
Please visit ChellyWood.com for free printable PDF sewing patterns and tutorial videos for making doll clothes to fit dolls of many shapes and all different sizes.

You want your neck to have that nice, almond-shaped boatneck without it slipping off the doll’s shoulders. And if you widen the front and back, you have to then adjust the neckline, to avoid cutting it too deeply.

However, if you accidentally cut the neckline too wide, I actually did a blog post on what you can do to make up for that mistake as well. Here’s an image from that alteration:

A dark African or African American Barbie doll stands beside the McCall's Crafts doll clothes pattern number 5462, displaying 10 different fashions for Barbie and similar sized dolls. The Barbie who holds up this envelope of McCall's patterns wears a handmade peach-colored long-sleeved or three-quarter-length sleeved shirt with a pair of white cotton shorts that have pastel polka dots decorating the shorts' fabric. She has a pair of white sneakers on.
Please visit ChellyWood.com for free printable PDF sewing patterns and tutorial videos for making doll clothes to fit dolls of many shapes and all different sizes.

And you can click here to read the full article on that alteration as well. As you can see, it also uses McCall’s Crafts Pattern #5462, but I used the longer sleeve variation with that alteration.

Most of the commercial patterns I display and talk about here on ChellyWood.com are also available for sale on eBay. However, if you’ve never purchased a pattern on eBay before, it’s a good idea to read the article I wrote called, “Tips for Buying Used Doll Clothes Patterns on eBay.” It will save you time, money, and will likely prevent buyer’s remorse.

And by the way, if you use the links I’ve provided to make your eBay purchase, this website will receive a small commission, which helps fund the ChellyWood.com website, so I can continue to provide you with all the free patterns and tutorial videos offered here.

To read more about my free sewing patterns and tutorials, please visit the “Helpful Tips” page.

For my free doll clothes sewing tutorial videos, be sure to subscribe to my YouTube channel, ChellyWood1.

Maybe you already own some great commercial patterns, but you really wish you could alter them to look just a little different. If so, my Creative Spark class, “How to Alter Doll Clothes Patterns” may be just what you need to make your commercially designed patterns into the pattern you see in your imagination.

In this image, we see a smattering of tools that will be needed to take the Creative Spark course on doll clothes pattern alterations with Chelly Wood. The items include the following: a doll, a ruler with metric and imperial measurements, a pencil with an eraser, graph paper, patterns that don't quite fit your doll, fabric, craft felt, ribbons, elastic, and post-it notes or scratch paper.
Visit ChellyWood.com for free printable PDF sewing patterns for making doll clothes to fit dolls of many shapes and all different sizes.

Are you worried that you won’t have time to take a course in doll clothes pattern alteration? You’ll be happy to learn that, for any class on Creative Spark, you don’t have to follow a schedule. Just sign up when you’re ready.

It’s a one-time fee for the course, and there’s no specific time limit to finish your course. You can just take your time and learn at the pace that suits you. So please go have a look at my paid courses on Creative Spark, using this link.

Disclaimer/Credit/Affiliate Marketing Link:

*ChellyWood.com earns money by linking to JoAnn Fabrics, Amazon, eBay, 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.

Chelly Wood and the ChellyWood.com website are not affiliated with the pattern company or companies mentioned in this blog post, but Chelly finds inspiration in the doll clothes designed by these pattern companies. To purchase patterns from Simplicity, McCall’s, Butterick, Vogue, or other pattern companies shown and discussed in this blog post, please click on the links provided here. These links below the “Disclaimer” section do not help raise money for this free pattern website; they are only offered to give credit to the company that made these patterns.

4 thoughts on “How to Alter a T-shirt Pattern, to Make a Crop Top w/McCall’s Crafts 5462 Doll Clothes Patterns #DollClothes #SewingPatterns

  1. Hi Chelly, You are definitely feeling better. I think you made up for your shortened blogs in this one lol. So happy you are feeling better.

  2. I’m so glad you are getting better.
    Thanks for your patterns. I have been able to make some lovely dress!

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