Hi there!! I’m Jess from If Only They Would Nap! You can find me there drinking lots of coffee and sewing for myself and my three little boys. If you’re in the market for some DIY maternity pants or to make some prefold cloth diapers, those are two of my most popular tutorials.
When I asked my almost five-year-old what costume he wanted to wear for trick-or-treating this year, he didn’t even have to think about it. “An elephant. And make it yourself, Mama, okay?” Well, if I must…
So, if your house needs an elephant for your dress-up box too, here’s how you can easily make one of your own. I find a lot of my fabrics, especially for costumes, by upcycling clothing that I find at thrift stores or that we no longer wear. [Go ahead and take a look at a few costumes that I’ve done in previous years… it’s alright, I’ll wait for you right here] Of course, you can just as easily use fabric from the store to make this.
Supplies:
- Old grey hooded sweatshirt
- Pink knit fabric – I used an old T-shirt
- White felt
- Soft elastic
- Wire coat hanger
- Sewing machine and/or serger
- Scissors
- Grey/White thread
- Poly-fil
Instructions:
1. Cut off the hood of the sweatshirt. Using a hoodie that currently fits your child as a guide, cut the hood smaller. You will have two sides that are cut open. You’ll leave these open for now.
2. Make ears out of the body of the sweatshirt and your pink knit material. You will want two of each color.
3. Place one grey/one pink ear right sides together. Serge or zig-zag stitch around the curved edges of the ears, leaving the flat edge open. Turn the ear right side out.
4. Cut a tube for the trunk. This is easy to do from the arm of the sweatshirt – it already has the right shape, you just cut it down to the size you want. One end should be skinnier than the other. Mine was about 19 inches long. Turn the right sides together and serge or zig-zag along the long side.
5. Measure the skinny end. [Mine was about 2.5 inches across] Make a circle out of sweatshirt material that is the same diameter [So my circle was about 2.5 inches from one side to the other]. Take a fabric marker and draw two ovals for the end of the elephant’s trunk.
6. Sew that onto the end of the trunk – with the tube still inside out, place the circle right side down, then serge or zig-zag together.
7. Turn right side out, stuff with poly-fil and a bent wire coat hanger, and hand stitch closed. The edges will not fray, so don’t worry about tucking the ends under.
8. Hand stitch a piece of soft elastic onto the larger end [the end you just closed up]. The length of your elastic will vary depending on how big your child is. Making it too long is better, because you can always trim it down [I ended up trimming mine WAY down]
9. Now you’ll be sewing on the ears. Start by determining where you want to attach the ears. Once you do that, you’ll want to unfold the hood and pin the ears on what would be the top of the hood. You’ll pin and zig-zag stitch on the pink [underside] of the ears. I used two rows of stitching, to make sure the ears held really tightly. The pictures below should help to further explain:
10. Next, try the hood on your little elephant. Determine where you want to place the trunk. I tried to place mine between my son’s nose and mouth – that way it wouldn’t get in the way of his breathing. When trying it on, also decide how tight you want the elastic. Then zig-zag a few times through only one layer of the hood. The stitching should be on the inside of the hood. [You can see in this picture that I stitched it on, then decided I wanted it tighter, so I just folded the elastic and stitched it on again, then cut off the extra]. Do this with both ends of the elastic.
11. Now you’re going to sew the hood closed. With the hood inside out, serge or zig-zag the back of the hood closed. Watch that you don’t accidentally sew in the ears!
12. Now turn the hood right side out, fold under the bottom edges, and top-stitch it closed. Remember to avoid sewing those ears again!
13. Now to add some tusks! [If you want to – if you don’t, you’re finished!] Cut four tusk shapes out of the white felt. Zig-zag each pair together. Then turn right side out, stuff with poly-fil, and hand-stitch them closed, just like you did with the trunk.
14. Determine where you’d like the tusks to sit.
15. Then hand-stitch them onto the trunk and the hood. Repeat with the other tusk.
Now pair it with a grey sweatsuit [upcycled like mine, or store bought]…
…and watch out for the water sprays from that trunk!
Comments & Reviews
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