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Youth Apron

Tags: apron inch edge

I am going to be teaching a young friend how to bake a chocolate cake. One can not bake without an Apron. I knew her favorite colors were pink and purple, so I made good use of some pink fabric scraps that I had left over from making pink tablecloths.

Since I did not have a pattern, I used an adult apron as inspiration and made a smaller paper pattern. It was easy; I folded the adult apron in half, lining up the fold up with the Edge of the paper. Since a child’s chest is narrower than an adult, I moved the fold of the apron off the edge of the paper by 1 Inch. That cut 2 inches off the width of the finished product.

I cut the top of the bib about an inch shorter than the adult version and cut the bottom of the pattern 5 inches shorter than the bottom of the apron. I also cut the sides down by an inch on each side.

I then sewed a double hem at the bottom, turning the fabric under 1/2 inch, then turned it up 1 inch after than. I finished the hem by sewing near the edge of the last fold.

I repeated the same process at the top, but I used a 1/4 inch and 1/4 inch double hem. I then made the same narrow double hems on each straight side.

This left the curved area under the arms unhemmed. Using purple double hem binding tape that I purchased at Walmart, I left long tails to tie around the neck and waist. The middle part was used to bind the edge of the curves on the pink fabric. When I sewed the binding, I went all the way from one tie end, through the curve, and finished at the end of the other tie end, repeating on the other side.

I added pockets (one with a secret message; more on that later). Since I wanted to tie the purple and pink together, without being too girlie, I used a purchased grosgrain ribbon to trim the pocket. I turned the edge of the ribbon in at the same time I sewed the pockets down.

All that was left was to add the young chef’s name to the top of the bib, and that my friends was a wrap (or at least an apron)!

This project did not take much time to sew, nor did it cost much. I already had all the thread I needed, so all I purchased was the purple binding and the purple ribbon. I think that cost $4 total.

This makes a great gift for a young person!

Bonus Information: With a hot pink Sharpie, on the edge of the inside pocket seam, I wrote, “Happy Cooking! Kayla” as a little note of inspiration to the aspiring baker.  See the photo above.  No one will know it is there, but her!



This post first appeared on At Home With Kayla Price, please read the originial post: here

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