From Quilt To Coat!

How many of my Farmgirl friends have seen the fashion trend from last year – making a coat from a vintage quilt? When I first saw it (for $700 at Anthropologie, no less) I was stunned and expected it to burn out pretty quickly… but here we are, more than a year later and the trend is still going strong!

A few times I’ve been tempted to make one for myself, but for some reason I’ve had this idea that I just wouldn’t be able to pull off that really awesome Bohemian look! So of course it held me back! (MaryJane could totally rock a quilt coat!!!)

Inspiration photo from @maryellendimauro

Little did I know that this mock up coat would bring out this crazy thing in me… it was so much fun to make, so simple really, and when I had my sixteen year old grand-daughter model it for me (in her pajamas no less) I hastily went to the coffee shop and met Chelsea, my new best farmgirl friend! Smile!

Chelsea’s grandmother’s quilt

I immediately began the process of making the coat for Chelsea’s mother. I laid the absolutely gorgeous vintage quilt from her grand-mother on the floor in my sewing room and began to gather the courage to cut into it. It was incredibly difficult to make that first cut. This was an old quilt that had been preserved beautifully. I sent Chelsea a text and said “are you absolutely certain your mother isn’t going to kill you for doing this”?! And when she reassured me she wouldn’t, I made that first cut! And then I was off and running.

Probably the best thing about making a coat from a quilt is that you have this great base to start with… a complete layer of outside fabric, warm batting, and a lining… already sewn together. So it is really just a matter of cutting out the pieces and sewing it up. I had found on the mock-up that I had made that I didn’t want any raw edges to show and I had bound the entire seams of the coat. Chelsea had loved that and wanted the exact same thing for her mother’s coat. She chose the same vintage red to bind her mother’s coat that I had used on the mock-up. It really is just the best color!

It came out stunning and the end of the quilt coat story is that our next coffee date was even more fun, Chelsea was positively thrilled with the coat, it made it to her mother in time for her 74th birthday and the photo that Chelsea sent me of her absolutely thrilled mother made my entire year! (I wish I could share the picture of her mother here… but permission wasn’t granted yet!)

So now, some information for you. Because I know you want to make one for yourself!

  • Start on Pinterest by searching “quilt coats made from vintage quilts” (or go directly to my saved Pinterest Quilt Coat board here)
  • Get ready to go down the rabbit hole!
  • Follow links to blog posts and patterns (there are so many good ones).
  • Find the perfect vintage quilt that you aren’t afraid to cut up (this is really the hardest part for me… emotionally!) There are a lot of what they call “cutter quilts” out there that are so tattered they really are beyond using. This is a great way to recycle them. Some quilters have literally made a quilt just to cut up and turn into a quilt coat! You could do that too!
  • Read blog posts you find (through Pinterest) on other people’s experiences on making quilt coats. There’s a lot of great advice out there.
  • I made my own pattern; however, I did purchase a few and one that was a great help to me and that I used parts of is called the Hovea Quilt Coat. I would highly recommend this pattern.
  • And lastly… JUMP RIGHT IN!!! You just can’t go wrong!

I hope you will give it a try! If you do (or if you already have), I want to see your pictures! Share with me at redfeedsack@gmail.com or tag me on Instagram @redfeedsack

Until our gravel roads cross again… so long.

Dori

  1. Kim Vanlandingham-Obrien says:

    I’m so inspired! Beautiful!

  2. Carol Slater says:

    Oh I wish I could sew and could make one of these. These are beautiful (your granddaughter is too).

    • Dori Troutman says:

      Hi Carol,

      Thank you!!! I wish you lived close to me and I’d help you make one! And yes… my sweet grand-girl is beautiful… probably the sweetest (almost) 17 year old around! (Says the Grammy!) Thank you.

      ~ Dori ~

  3. Janetsue Filberth says:

    Dori
    I totally understand how hard it is to cut into a vintage quilt!! I had a beautiful one which I acquired at a thrift store for $10 but it was quite tattered
    I decided to make full length curtains for our studio shed that my husband had built for me the quilt had a scalloped edge, and it just lent itself to curtains. I used every bit of that quilt without waste….. making treatments for two other windows that turned out darling
    But I remember, stretching that quilt out and putting the scissors next to it and just breaking out in a cold sweat!!
    Your jackets turned out beautifully!!

    • Dori Troutman says:

      Good morning!!! I got your email with the photos and WOW!!!! I love your curtains. Brilliant how you used the scalloped edge!!! Thank you for sharing.

      ~ Dori ~

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