Can I tell you how excited I am to go into labor? And be huffing and puffing and yelling for more ice? All right, I’m not excited for the pain but let me tell ya, I’m going to be riding that pain in style.
I saw this Etsy gorgeousness ($69- not bad!!!) on Pinterest:
and wanted it… right then and there. But with a few changes. One of the bothersome things about hospital gowns for me is the fact that when you unsnap your shoulder snaps to nurse that new baby, the shoulders fall all over and before you know it you are nekked from the neck to your waist. Unfortunately, while this gown is worlds apart from the standard hospital issue, it still had snaps on the shoulders.
So I went and made exactly what I wanted.
Two of them.
Want to know how?
You need:
Hospital Gown Pattern Pieces (pattern is for a smallish person although it can fit bigger with very few alterations)
3 yards pre-washed fabric
1 yard snap tape
Coordinating ribbon
Sewing stuff
zipper foot
This tutorial uses 1/2” seam allowances
To save paper (I went through a lot with the muslin and re-drawing over and over…), I made the pattern pieces for the front and back just for the neck/sleeve part. For the rest, use a measuring tape along the side of your fabric to mark where to cut.
For my 5’4” frame, 36” was the magic length from the neck to the bottom.
As I cut the front piece, I tapered it pretty good so it made an A-line shape. You want room for that belly!
Then I cut my sleeves. My blue gown has longer sleeves than my pink gown, and I think they look a little better longer. Just add a few inches to your pattern if you want to go longer.
Next, I cut the yoke pieces from fabric and lightweight interfacing. The blue gown wasn’t interfaced, and I realized how valuable it is! I highly suggest it, even though it isn’t on the pattern.
Next, place your sleeve pieces on your back pieces, right sides together, matching the curves. Sew these together at the curve.
Finish your edges. This whole finishing thing is a big deal for this project- so either serge, zig-zag, overlock, roll hems, or use pinking shears.
Once both back pieces have a sleeve attached, it is time to move on to the yoke.
Sew your yoke pieces together into a long back-front-back strip. You will end up with two long pieces. Then, sew those two long pieces together, right sides together, along the short ends and inner curve.
Trim the seam allowance to get rid of bulk, or clip the curve; whichever you prefer. This was just faster :)
You’ll end up with a shape akin to a toilet seat… lovely!
Turn it inside out and iron that seam flat and beautiful. I used a dull pencil to get my corners to a nice point before I ironed.
While you are at the ironing board, iron the outer curve under about 1/2”. I think mine ended up more like 5/8”.
Next, top-stitch that inner curve. I didn’t do this on the blue gown and it just looks nice with it.
Now put some snaps on! Pin the female snaps to the underside (you choose which is the underside) of your yoke. The snaps should span just the center yoke pieces. Use a zipper foot to get a nice stitching line, making sure you sew through both layers of the yoke as you go. I just sewed down the long sides. The front should look like this:
I’m going for practical here, not absolutely beautiful ;)
Now take your front gown piece and finish the sleeve edges. Then, gather the top neckline. You want the gathers to end up the same width as your front center yoke piece. When you get it to the right size, finish your top edge.
Add the male snaps to this piece, matching the snap placement with your yoke piece.
We’ve reached goal #1- a detachable front!
Awesome.
Ok, now for the sleeves and back part.
Place your sleeves right sides together on your front piece, matching curved edges. Sew only 1/2” along the curved edge. You want it left open the rest of the way. Attach both sleeves to the front piece this way.
Finish the long sides on the back pattern pieces and sleeve curves. Next, gather your back neckline and sleeve top edge. When it is gathered to the same length as the remaining yoke pieces, go ahead and tuck that gathered edge in between your yoke layers.
Pin it really well! Make sure your bottom yoke layer is attached too- you don’t want that to slip out of the way.
When you get to the edges near the front yoke, fold the sleeve under 1/2” and pin it in the yoke like that before you sew it down. Ignore the ratty nest my thread made up there…
Put your male snaps on the front yoke along your finished sleeve edge.
Fold your sleeve edge over 1/2”, and sew your female snap tape to the underside of the sleeve along the hem.
Snap all those snaps together and this is what you’ve got! Goal #2 reached- sleeves remain on shoulders!
Lay your back pieces right sides together with the front and sew along the edges, including the armpit edge. Match your sleeve seams the best you can. Finish the edges.
On one back edge, make about 5/8” hem. I wanted to keep it in place, so I sewed about 1/8” down the edge.
Cut 8 snaps off your snap tape and place them evenly down the back of your gown (I did this only because snap tape is a zillion dollars a yard a JoAnn’s and I was trying to conserve :) But it works really well.). Sew them on, one at a time, along your ironed edge.
Attach the other half of your snaps to the other back side, this time on the front of the fabric. It is super important that you make sure the snaps line up before you sew them on. No one wants to see a wonky-snap-bum. Right? Yay- Goal #3 done: epidural access :) No, really, you need the back open for lots during labor and delivery.
All that is left is hemming the bottom of the gown, and hemming the sleeves. I used a 1/2” hem for both.
Trim your threads (there will be tons), and put it on! Use a ribbon to wrap around just above your bump (or mountain, whichever) and tie a fun bow.
The back is nice and closed (but has easy doc/nurse/anesthesiologist access),
And the front is ever-so-cute, unlike my face in this picture.
Want to see it in action? Er, not on me… Alta will take this one for me. And in terrible light, no less.
See? When you need to nurse, you just unsnap the side you’re on and you remain almost completely covered the whole time. Sorry to Alta for exposing so much ;)
Now, I know the snaps in the front make it less beautiful than that Etsy inspiration, but it gets the job done! I’m absolutely thrilled with these gowns. Kind of makes me not want to wear them because they are so darn cute and things are bound to get messy.
Pink for the potential girl:
Blue for the potential boy:
(because I am still bringing both colors of newborn outfits to the hospital ;))
I am excited for those new baby shots where I don’t have half my chest and a shoulder popping out! Yay!

Mel, you are so cool. Seriously, Did you create the pattern all yourself? Cuz it is seriously awesome! If I had more ambition and wasn't due at Christmas I would make some too!
ReplyDeleteI've never been in the hospital before. So will they let you wear these through labor and afterwards? Anyone tried it? I just have no idea how things go down in there! lol
ReplyDeleteYou are the cutest and this is great!!!
ReplyDeleteI love them! Because I have 0 sewing skills, I will need to hire your cute self for my next babe birth :)
ReplyDeleteI can't wait to see who/what comes out! - that sounds weird..
Wow, you are so clever! I love how you made the opening for nursing. I'm not pregnant, but will definitely be bookmarking this one for the future. :)
ReplyDeletethese are sooo adorable! I may have to make one for the next little one whenever that happens!
ReplyDeleteWay cute! The only thing I would worry about is not having some sort of snap system on the shoulders...the shoulder snaps help when you need to change but have IVs in your arms (so that you don't have to take the IV off to put on something new)... I may have to make one of these, but with just a few modifications. Thanks for sharing and great job!
ReplyDeleteI JUST printed off a hospital gown pattern last night, but I love yours so much more! Bummed I wasted the ink, but SUPER excited to make yours instead :)
ReplyDeleteI've already cut out all my pattern pieces and started pinning! Gotta go get some snap tape though.
These are so pretty!! :) Great and thorough tutorial. I'm still laughing about the toilet seat.
ReplyDeleteSo smart, Melanie!
ReplyDeleteyou are SO cute!! i love it:) thanks for the tutorial as well/ you rock!
ReplyDeleteI'm due at the end of January, and can't wait to make one of these! I hate the shoulder/boob falling out pictures, that husbands and family seem to always take. Thanks for this awesome tutorial!
ReplyDeleteSuper Cute! Wish I had a few of those for my times in the hospital. Not worth having another little one just to look so cut after a birth, tho. ;) Way to go on the gown!
ReplyDeleteWow! Your an amazing sewer... You look gorgeous by the way.
ReplyDeleteSome of these would have been great when I had my girls.
What a great idea! Love that it has all the features of a gown but sooooo much cuter! Stopping by from sugar bee crafts :) and congrats on the new baby!
ReplyDeleteLove it! What a great idea! Good luck with the delivery of your new little sweetie!
ReplyDeletePinning this...hadn't thought of making my own, but this is brilliant.
ReplyDeleteThese are so cute! If my baby wasn't due in a week, I'd probably make one. Maybe next time.
ReplyDeleteLook at you crafting with your cute belly sticking out! LOL The green poke-a-dot with yellow ribbon is my favorite =D These are an awesome idea!!
ReplyDeleteYou Go Momma!!!
Oh how I LOVE this! I sooo wish I had something this adorable when I had any one of my (3) kids. It does feel a bit institutional wearing the hospital gowns. And I could not stand how bare I was nursing. I am excited for you to get to wear these!!! : ) You'll be so cute!!
ReplyDeleteThis a great tutorial!
ReplyDeleteMelanie
Sew Rugged @ bear rabbit bear
bearrabbitbear.blogspot.com
Wow, great idea! I am having my second in March and it never occurred to me to bring my own gown. (do hospitals ever object to this????) I hate I-feel-completely-nakedness that typical hospital gowns give. Thanks for the awesome tutorial!
ReplyDeleteThis is awesome! Would have been a life saver (or embarrassment saver) for me with my previous three labors - oh well. My sister is due in February and I'm seriously considering making some of these for her! Great tutorial!
ReplyDeleteWell, won't you be the cutest patient at the hospital! And I'm impressed that you have the energy for a tutorial this late in the game.
ReplyDeleteCan't wait to find out if you are really having a boy or a girl after all. I couldn't believe the switcheroo! That would make me crazy.
Good luck in the coming weeks. :)
This just might revolutionize childbirth for some people! I think I've figured out what my sister-in-law's Christmas present might be. This is adorable!
ReplyDeleteFabulous! Can I hope you are already using these awesome gowns? I had to laugh about the 'mountain' comment. LOL It's been a long time for me but my last pregnancy was twins and if it helps, my belly was twice the size of yours I swear. Congratulations!
ReplyDeleteMy son's fiancee is pregnant and expecting our 3rd grandchild (a girl) in Feb. so I might have to see if I can find a way to make her a few of these. Thanks for such a great tutorial.
Good luck in the hospital.
I LOVE this! I would love if you would share this at the Crazy Cute link party happening at Between U & Me right now! I've got a totally awesome giveaway this week, too!
ReplyDeleteOOH! AND, I'm your newest follower! ;)
www.betweenuandme.com
Oh my gosh! That is so smart. I hate that most about the hospital stay. When people walk in and out and your completely exposed and your supposed to act like it's no big deal. That gown is so perfect! You are so smart!
ReplyDeleteCan't wait to hear about that little baby!
Cami
Wow - what a great tutorial. I have 3 children and I have never seen one of those! What a brilliant idea, thanks for sharing. Your newest follower, Karima
ReplyDeletewww.karimascrafts.com
How do I know if the pattern printed out to the correct size?
ReplyDeleteChrissie-
ReplyDeleteGood point, there isn't a scale on the pattern! When you print it, make sure it is set to an 8.5 x 11 piece of paper, and print it as borderless if your printer doesn't like the margins. FOr reference, one of the top tutorial pictures has the top front piece measuring 8.5" long on the fold. Since it was made to fit me, cutting a muslin mock-up first would help you adjust for any size changes that need to be made.
Hi again - please disregard my last comment/question. I finally figured out that A and B go together on the hash lines. Oh my goodness do I have baby brain! Bleh. Please don't publish my first comment - I feel kinda silly that I couldn't figure it out.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for the tutorial. I am on my 5th and LAST baby and would love to have something cute to wear in the hospital that doesn't expose every inch of my postpartum nastiness. Now that I finally figured it out - I'll be making it tomorrow. Thanks again!
Thank you so much for the pattern! That saved me so much headache trying to piece one together. I really like the yolk you had on yours vs. some of the other ones I've seen online. I also adapted it to have the entire sleeve opening on the top, but if I make another one I think I'd follow your pattern exactly! I'm just wondering when did you actually wear yours? Did you wear one before birth and one after? Or just after?
ReplyDeleteOh, and here's a link! http://dennisandalea.blogspot.com/2012/01/my-own-hospital-gown.html
Absolutely beautiful, and modest too. Talk about giving birth in style! People like you are exactly why i want to learn to sew! :)
ReplyDeleteAck! I have been searching for a gown that wouldn't fall off at the shoulder!! Thank you for solving the problem so stylishly!!!!
ReplyDeleteFirst, this gown is very cute. That being said. I was a labor and delivery nurse, and while this is adorable. It should only be used in maternity. There is a reason the gowns are the way they are in Labor and Delivery. 1) Because they can be very rapidly removed in case of an emergency where we need full access to your body, such as an emergency C-Section or for whatever unusual reason, your heart stops and we need to defibrilate you. If we can't quickly unsnap the gown we will cut it off you. 2) Because we don't have to remove your IV tubing that you have to have if you are getting any kind of medication, like an epidural or pitocin in order to change your gown because your water broke and you are now all gooey wet, or you are just post delivery and covered in all of the blood and mucus from giving birth.
ReplyDeleteDear Melanie, You've yet again amazed me with your crafty cleverness! I love this idea and plan on making a couple soon for a some friends. Just a quick question, and it's probably a pretty "DUH!" question & already answered somewhere on your blog, but I'm gonna take a shot and ask anyway. When I print your patterns (LOVE YOU for offering them to us for free, THANKS!)do I make sure my printer settings are "fit to page" or "actual size"? I'm assuming actual size, but I just want to make sure I'm doing it right. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteYou're right, snap tape at JoAnn's IS a zillion dollars a yard! At my local store it was $6.99 for a package with 17.5 inches (seriously, snap tape people, for an arm & a leg, you can't make it an equal 1/2 yard???) And even with a coupon, it's still pretty dang spendy, so I wanted to share an ebay store where I found it pretty cheap, even with shipping ($2.25 a yard + $2.62 shipping). And you can buy it in multiple colors (only found black & white at JoAnn's). Check out the ebay store: Cottage Dreams Wholesale Fabrics
ReplyDeleteI haven't actually ordered any from this seller yet, but I plan to soon!! :o)
This is brilliant!
ReplyDeleteMy little girl is 3 months old and I searched to try and find a pattern for something like this with no luck till now.
I'll just have to have another baby so I can make one to have in hospital!
Help, please?!!
ReplyDeleteI think I am up to the " pin it in the yoke like that before you sew it down....ignore the ratty nest" spot....
At the "put your male snaps on the front yoke.....at this point my yoke has been sewed down. There is no "free" yoke space. I am not visualizing putting snap tape along the. sleeve hem....that's where my arm needs to come out....what does the sleeve hem snap to?
Sorry if I am missing something really obvious.... my sewing buddy and I are at a loss... thanx!
CMc-I see where you are- the sleeve isn't sewn completely to the front of the dress yet, just at the underarm part and at the yoke. You'll have a gaping hole between the front of the gown and the sleeve, and that is where the snaps go.
ReplyDeleteIf you still can't get it, e-mail me. You are a no-reply commenter so I can't e-mail you directly!
I'm working on this, but am hesitant to make the A line and have the bottom be too wide. If you don't mind, what were your measurements for across the bottom?
ReplyDeleteHi, my name is Angela and I just sent you an email. I am having a hard time accessing the pattern. Your tutorial seems great and I cannot wait to start.
ReplyDeleteThank you,
Angela
I love this pattern and am making one for my daughter but I'm confused on the pattern pieces. There isn't a shot that pulls back far enough in the tutorial to tell where the pieces are being used (not a complaint because you did a great job) but there is Front/Back A and Front/Back B ?? Front/Back A is the front and back bodice with one being a single piece and another cut to be the two parts of the back bodice but where does Front/Back B go? Are these pieces joined at the dashed line to make a single pattern piece? I think so but I wanted to check so I don't ruin the cute fabric I have. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteImamom45-
ReplyDeleteYes, you do have to connect the pattern pieces on the dashed line. A regular 8 1/2 x 11 or A4 piece of paper won't fit the whole pattern, so I had to divide it. When you tape them together, you'll have only one piece for the bodice.
I checked your shop just to make sure... since you're not selling these (boo) I'm going to have to make my own! I think I'll do it next week, it generally takes me that long to actually get brave enough to attempt a new project. Will let you know how it goes. Thank you for such a detailed tutorial!
ReplyDeleteHi Melanie. Thank you for the hospital gown tutorial. I am a beginner with sewing; Would you be able to expound on the use of lightweight interfacing? Like, where you use it and how?
ReplyDeleteThanks.
You can get lightweight interfacing at fabric stores, or I have even seen it at Walmart on occassion. You would just cut the neck yoke pieces (the ones that when sewn together look like the toilet seat!) out of the interfacing as well, and then iron it to the wrong side of the fabric pieces before sewing them together. There should be directons on the interfacing when you purchase it on how to iron it, but that is where I'd put it!
ReplyDeleteThank you Melanie for responding. I do have just one more question for you if you don't mind. You said that you prefered the longer sleeves, and that you can just add a couple inches to the pattern. Which side of the sleeve pattern would I add the couple of inches? If the "fold" side in on the right, would the top side be the one I add inches to?
ReplyDeleteThanks.
Hi Melanie,
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for this wonderful pattern! I plan on making one for a friend as part of her shower gift. However, she is a bit bigger than you. I was wondering how to go about enlarging the pattern appropriately?
Thanks!
Love this tutorial!
ReplyDeleteI'm making one of these for a coworker but she is not the same dimensions as you are. She's 5'3" and I believe she wears a L or XL. How would I go about making the pattern larger? Could I just add a few inches to the side of the front and back pieces?
Kayla,
ReplyDeleteYes, I'd add an inch to the pattern pieces, and I would make the sleeve arm opening bigger too. Hope it works out for you!
Hi -- what size would you consider this gown? Would it be a size small, perhaps? (size 4-6)
ReplyDeleteI need to make one for a size L or XL (size 12-14).
Haldira,
ReplyDeleteYes, this would be a small-medium size. You can print it as is and refer to an existing shirt or dress to see how much to add to alter it, and remember that loose is better!
Hi,
ReplyDeleteHow long should the yoke be? I might have missed a step or not cut out enough pieces and it seems that my yoke is not long enough.
Thank you
Brenda, You should have three pieces for the yoke; see the above photos to see what it should look like. The three pieces sewn together make the whole yoke.
ReplyDeleteMy daughter is expecting a baby in two weeks and wants me to make her your darling dress, but while she’s 5’4” like you, she is way bigger on top – especially at 8 and a half months pregnant! I read all the comments and saw that someone asked how to make it bigger and you said to add an inch. I’m not sure that would be enough for my daughter! What is – or was -your measurement on top in those photos? That might help me figure out how many more inches to add.
ReplyDeleteAlso, I’m confused because when I printed out the pieces, there is a Front/Back A and a Front/Back B. Which one do I use? I tried to figure it out by looking at your photos, but the front/back pattern piece you have pinned on to the pink fabric isn’t exactly the same shape as either of the pattern pieces A-or B.
I’m old and it’s late, so maybe my eyes are deceiving me. Help!
Joan,
ReplyDeleteI am not sure of the measurements; the gowns are with a friend who will be delivering soon! If in doubt, just add more to the pattern. I am a size 2-4, pretty small, so that might help? Also, someone said that the arm holes were too small for her too, so watch for that. It is always tough sharing a pattern that was custom-sized!
The pattern pieces have a dashed line that connects the two pieces; just connect them there, and you will have the completed piece. If you have other questions, try e-mailing me because your e-mail isn't attached to your profile. melcollette at gmail dot com.
Melanie,
ReplyDeleteI'm an experienced sewer, but I can't figure out something about this pattern. Please help! I am looking at the pattern pieces for the front/back and the sleeve. I know the curved parts will be sewn together. The curved part of the sleeve is much shorter than that for the body. The sleeve curve measures 5 1/2" and the body curve measures 7". How do these go together? You don't show or mention easing the body to fit the sleeve. I'm stumped! I will also try to cut a larger opening for the arm but I've got to figure this out first.
Thanks for your help!
Margaret
Maragret,
ReplyDeleteOh, the pattern is a bit confusing!! The sleeve and bodice curves match up exactly, so I think the long part you are looking at is the neckline, not the arm line. Hold the pages up against one another until you find the matching curve. I promise it is there!
A friend of mine asked me to make her a gown for her 4th c-section. We both like this pattern the best. But, I'm concerned about the sleeves not opening up all the way for IV lines and what-not. Any suggestions?
ReplyDeleteFranchesca,
ReplyDeleteEasy! Instead of placing the sleeve piece on the fold, add 3/4" on the "fold" side and just cut two separate pieces. Add the snaps like you did on the neck where the now cut "fold" sides match up, and continue sewing as in the instructions.
Hello,
ReplyDeleteWhen I measure the B piece to see if it is to scale, it measures 8.5 if I go to the bottom of the page, not to the "lengthen here" line. Is that right? Can you maybe give me something else to measure to see if it is to scale? I love it and it is so cute and I can't wait to try it. I am a novice sewer but I have faith I can do it because I understand all your instructions, just want to make sure I have it to the right scale.
I finally made some more pattern pieces, this time with a 1" square on it for scale reference. Go back and download the new pattern, hopefully it helps!
DeleteYou are awesome! Thank you. They will work great. 37 weeks today. I got to get it sewn up!
DeleteI just found this pattern today, and am thinking of making 2-3 for myself... I'm due in 9 weeks! I'm a first time mom, and am curious about what a few people (the L&D nurse especially) said about the IV: was this even a problem? I'm not expecting to really need an IV unless for strep antibiotics or some emergency... I thought I probably COULD somehow alter it and add snaps down the middle of the sleeve so it can come off that way too, but don't want to go to that much work (plus it'll be uglier =)) if I don't have to.
ReplyDeleteDo you have thoughts on this? I suppose I could make ONE with snaps down each arm (or could I just do one arm: WHICH arm??) then the other two will just be for after the delivery feedings and to be able to be slightly more covered when visitors come... Thanks so much!!
Robyn,
DeleteIt might be specific to your hospital, it won't hurt to ask if you can bring your own gown. A lot of hospitals and doctors let you do it, they just say to be prepared if they need to cut it off for some reason! My sister wore a nightgown to deliver, so there is some flexibility! Mine just asked that it be open in the back. Usually IV's have a thingy that closes up the part that goes into your arm so they can change what is going into you. If you need to move or change while you have the IV, you can ask to have them unhook it for a minute (can you see how knowledgeable I am in medical lingo? lol!) if it isn't an emergency.
Usually they put the IV in your less dominant arm, so if you are right-handed it will go on the left, but no guarantees!
If you want to change the sleeves, I put some notes at the end of the post about how to do it easily. It can still be as cute even with snaps on the shoulders!
Great pattern and idea!
ReplyDeleteI will say the issue would not only be with switching IVs, but with imaging, too. Imagine having chest pain after delivery and your doctor orders a portable x-ray or has you go to the radiology department. Unless the snaps are radiolucent (see through for x-ray purposes), you would have to change or have the images redone if it was a rushed job. Worst case scenario, I know, but check with your hospital and like you said, be flexible.
Made my own and I love it! I can't wait to wear it to welcome visitors to meet the baby; going to make another to wear home, and we'll see if I have time to make a third to wear for actual labor. I linked this post on my blog, so that my friends can see your wonderful pattern. Thank you for sharing!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for sharing this, I just made one and it turned out awesome! For others' information, I'm 5'6" and now at 35 weeks pregnant I weigh about 170 lbs. If that shape describes you, it might work for you to alter the pattern as I did...I added 2" length at the bottom, and 1" all around all pattern pieces except on the fold lines.
ReplyDeleteAlso, was this really obvious to everyone else but not to me, that to make the 2 back pieces I cut another front on the fold and then cut it in 1/2? That's what I did, but the instructions didn't really say.
Thanks again!
I don't know anything about sewing how patterns so I was wondering if anyone here could help me figure out how much fabric I'll need and how many inches I should add to each piece to fit me, I'm an XL. Thank you in advance! 9 weeks to go :)
ReplyDelete