Here’s a super easy-to-sew dress to make for Mattel’s Stacie dolls (Barbie’s little sister) w/FREE patterns @ ChellyWood.com #Barbie #Christmas

An African American Stacie doll (the little sister of Barbie) models a handmade cotton and felt, easy-to-sew dress with a halter top style bodice and a 3/4 length skirt. The halter top is made with bias tape (or ribbon) and white felt. The skirt is a gathered rectangle skirt made of green floral cotton fabric.
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.

Scroll down to the second set of bullets to download the free printable PDF sewing pattern.*

With Christmas inching ever closer each day, it’s always a good idea to offer a few patterns that even the beginners can sew, this year, as Christmas gifts!

If you’re planning to buy someone a Mattel Stacie doll (Barbie’s little sister), this dress is easy to sew and will fit Mattel’s modern Stacie dolls.

Please note: when you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include Amazon, JoAnn Fabric, Etsy, and the eBay Partner Network. As an Amazon affiliate, I earn from qualifying purchases. To learn more about how my website uses affiliate marketing, please visit the website’s Privacy Policy page.

Three Stacie dolls model the same dress. On the left, it shows an African American 9 inch Stacie doll modeling a felt and cotton easy-to-sew dress from the side view; in the center a Caucasian Stacie models the dress from the front view; on the right the same African American Stacie doll models the same green and white easy-sew dress from an angle facing slightly toward the left of the viewer.
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.

I originally designed this dress to fit Dawn dolls from Topper (6 and 1/8 inch or 15.5 cm), so you’ll see them pictured on the pattern. But don’t be discouraged by that. The pattern will definitely fit your Stacie dolls too!

Today’s pattern is offered both as a PDF for American printers, and also as a PDF for A4 printer paper. I’m not sure my measurement tool is working right on the A4 printer paper, but I’ve tested the pattern with my own A4 paper on my American printer and it looks passably close to the pattern I’ve printed on American paper.

So… I’m not really confident about how the A4 pattern will turn out.

A Caucasian strawberry blond Stacie doll (the little sister of Barbie) models a handmade cotton and felt, easy-to-sew dress with a halter top style bodice and a 3/4 length skirt. The halter top is made with bias tape (or ribbon) and white felt. The skirt is a gathered rectangle skirt made of green floral cotton fabric.
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.

If you’re printing the pattern on A4 paper, please come back to this blog post at a later date and let me know how the overall sewing process went, okay? Is the pattern printing correctly for you? If not, what can I do to improve the quality of the pattern on A4 paper?

There’s also a sweet little purse that goes with this dress, and here’s the link to that tutorial if you want to make the tiny purse as well.

Here we see the photo of a tiny miniature handmade doll's purse. The strap is made of a lime green ribbon. The body of the purse is made of green cotton with big psychedelic daisies in white and brighter lime green -- almost yellow. The flap is a faux (fake) purse flap made of white felt, overlaid on top of the green cotton purse dotted with daisies. The white felt has tiny green topstitches framing the flap. At the bottom, almost-pointed end of the purse flap is a tiny green button. A doll's hand holds the purse up by the strap. The Chelly Wood dot com logo appears in one 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.

To make today’s little halter style dress, you’ll need some craft felt, some cotton fabric, and a bit of 1/4 inch (6 mm) wide bias tape. You’ll also need a few snaps, and I recommend size 4/0 Dritz snaps.

In my tutorial, I also mentioned Fiskars Stitchers’ scissors, which are fantastic for making tiny snips! With a dress as tiny as this one, detail precision snips are super important.

I also used a Dritz fabric pencil in my tutorial video. It’s handy for marking darts, and a fabric pencil easily washes out of most fabrics without damaging them.

Which dolls will this dress be suitable for?

** For dolls with a double asterisk, this dress fits them in a shorter length, rather than a full floor length gown.

Free patterns and tutorial videos for making this little tiny dress:

If you enjoyed this blog post, and you’d like to see my videos, you might want to navigate over to my YouTube channel, ChellyWood1 to look through my playlists.

This image of a turquoise blue sewing needle pulling purple thread away from a line of cross-stitching is used as a divider between sections of a blog post.

For anyone who would like to expand their dolls’ wardrobes, you should really check out my “How to Alter Doll Clothes Patterns” course and my “Design Your Own Doll Pants Patterns from Scratch” class on the Creative Spark online learning platform. Here’s a link to my bio page on their website, where you can learn more.

This image shows four rows of artist's renderings of doll clothing items. The top row shows four different styles of pants. The second row shows four different styles of shirts. The third row shows four different styles of skirts. The fourth row shows four different styles of dresses, with skirts in long, short, and mid-length styles. The text reads at the top, "Classes in Doll Clothing Design" followed by this paragraph: "Have you ever wished you could create patterns of your own? Click on the links to Chelly's online courses below, to learn more about her paid courses in doll clothing pattern design techniques."

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 go check out my paid courses on Creative Spark, using this link.

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

Disclaimer/Credit/Affiliate Marketing Link:

*When you click links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include Amazon, JoAnn Fabric, Etsy, and the eBay Partner Network. As an Amazon affiliate, I earn from qualifying purchases. To learn more about how my website uses affiliate marketing, please visit the website’s Privacy Policy page.

***Please note: this is the first time I’ve ever converted one of my patterns to A4 printer paper. I may not have the measurement tool just right, but I’d love some feedback! for those of you who use A4 paper, let me know whether or not the measurement tool is printing correctly. I’m pretty sure the pattern, as printed on A4 paper, will fit both Dawn dolls and Pippa dolls, but I can’t be 100% sure until I get feedback from several Pippa collectors. That’s what I need a little feedback for! Feel free to leave a comment…

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.

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

Chelsea and Enchantimals 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.

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

Disney fairy dolls are products offered by the Disney Corporation, which holds the registered trademark for them (™). Please visit the Official Shop Disney website to learn more about their company and its trademarked toys.

Lottie dolls are manufactured and designed by Arklu (Ireland) Ltd., in Donegal, Ireland, and Arklu holds the registered trademark (™) for them in the US. Lottie dolls are distributed in the USA by Schylling, Inc. These dolls are distributed in the UK, Ireland, France, and Italy by Bigjigs Toys Ltd. Visit Lottie.com to learn more about these wonderful toys that were inspired by kids.

Pippa dolls were produced in Great Britain by Palitoy from 1972 to 1980. Palitoy is now a defunct company, and to my knowledge the Pippa dolls have not had a revival. You can learn more about Palitoy on Wikipedia. You can learn more about these dolls at OverZone’s Pippa Dolls Archive or on the Pippa ID Parade.

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.

Strawberry Shortcake dolls are products offered by Shortcake IP Holdings LLC, which holds the registered trademark for them (™). Please visit the Strawberry Shortcake 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.

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