Maternity Dress diy

Maternity Dress for Weddings
Maternity Dress

The news is out. My hus­band and I are hav­ing a baby lat­er this fall! So, there is no sur­prise that I recent­ly made a few mater­ni­ty and post­par­tum gar­ments for myself.

I was recent­ly inter­viewed by my dad, Chris God­frey, for his Sand­wich Gen­er­a­tion Radio Show. You can lis­ten to the audio show or read the full tran­script in the link here: Life of a Cou­ture Dress­mak­er and Fash­ion Designer

Here is a snip­pet from the radio show, when my dad asks about mater­ni­ty dress­mak­ing and style. 

You can order a cus­tom for­mal mater­ni­ty dress from me here: Mater­ni­ty Dress for Weddings

Floral shoulder tie dress for weddings, maternity, postpartum, and photos

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Beau­ty Out­lasts the Beast

Chris-

And before that, did I see you work­ing on a mater­ni­ty gown this week.

Mary Grace-

Yep, I’m work­ing on mater­ni­ty clothes.

Chris-

How’s that going?

Mary Grace-

 It’s a learn­ing process. But’s only a learn­ing process because I am learn­ing what works for preg­nant ladies’ bod­ies and needs.

I thought some­thing would look good on me and then I real­ize, “Nope! This is not going to work on my preg­nant or post-par­tum body.”

 It was hard to find any mater­ni­ty clothes in stores. It’s nice hav­ing sewing skills and being able to cre­ate the cloth­ing I need for my body and lifestyle.

Chris-

How does that work? I know women are all dif­fer­ent sizes. So, some­thing may look good on one woman and not on the oth­er. Is the same true for mater­ni­ty or does every body work the same, in a sense?

Mary Grace-

Well, I guess most women will seek sim­i­lar styles and want to fit and hide the same body fea­tures. I’m learn­ing the lit­tle tricks of mater­ni­ty cloth­ing, like cov­er­ing up the arms, adding or elim­i­nat­ing things to cre­ate an illusion.

Yes­ter­day, I cre­at­ed a new dress design. I put way too much fab­ric in it, in par­tic­u­lar­ly the back of the dress. It was not where you want­ed extra fab­ric and it made the hips and butt look even big­ger. So I had to cor­rect that and makes changes to the final design. I also put a big bow on the shoul­ders to hide the back of the arms, which I would nor­mal­ly not do bows. In fact, my hus­band saw the bows and laughed. He did not think the dress looked like my usu­al style.

But, the bows were nec­es­sary and I left them on the design, which I can always adjust into nor­mal straps lat­er when I’m not pregnant.

___________________________

DIY Cute Formal Floral Maternity Dress with bows and tie shoulders

I pur­chased this beau­ti­ful white and red rose stretch cot­ton dur­ing my first trimester. I was very sick and nau­seous dur­ing the first few months and my sis­ters con­vinced me to buy a beau­ti­ful fab­ric for a mater­ni­ty dress. They said it would help me focus on the future and get through that peri­od of time. (I real­ly did not expect preg­nan­cy morn­ing sick­ness to be so awful. I real­ly should’ve been more sym­patric to my sis­ters dur­ing their preg­nan­cies. Sor­ry Katie and Tess!)

Couture Maternity Dress
Drap­ing flo­ral cot­ton jacquard fab­ric on dress form as I test dif­fer­ent styles for mater­ni­ty dresses

My sis­ters were right! Design­ing DIY mater­ni­ty gar­ments cer­tain­ly gave me some­thing to look for­ward to ear­ly on and now I feel good that I have clothes that fit. (Before my mater­ni­ty dress­es, I was wear­ing old pants and shorts and rolling them under my bel­ly- which was not com­fort­able or flat­ter­ing.) I look for­ward to wear­ing the pret­ty and cute mater­ni­ty dress­es for pho­tos, wed­dings, bap­tism, mass, and baby show­ers dur­ing all my pregnancies.

Cute blue linen Maternity Dress sewn with shoulder ties
Shoul­der bows cov­er­ing the shoul­ders and arms

The dress­es are self-draft­ed mater­ni­ty sewing pat­terns.

This mater­ni­ty dress design is made to fit my body dur­ing and after preg­nan­cy. The gown is made with a sash and no waist­line seam, so that I can adjust the height of the waist with the detach­able belt after I have a baby.  The adjustable ties at the shoul­ders are meant to hide the top back of my arms. (I may adjust the straps or add sleeves later.)

Instead of mak­ing a dis­pos­able muslin mock-up for my for­mal flo­ral dress, I used cute blue and white striped linen to test my dress pat­tern and wear again for Sun­day mass or cock­tail par­ties. As you can see in the pho­tos below, I test­ed the dress style in both long and tea length. I took votes from Insta­gram on what length to cut for the flo­ral gown, which will be worn for future wed­dings and pos­si­bly the baby’s christening. 

White and blue maternity dress for photos with bow ties shoulders DIY

The Insta­gram votes were split exact­ly down the mid­dle. I decid­ed to cut the flo­ral spe­cial occa­sion dress long, but hem it 6 inch­es short­er. In case I want it long in the future, I left the extra fab­ric in the hem of the dress.

Custom couture floral maternity gown with bows and silk cotton. NYC dressmaker
Floral maternity gown for photos and weddings. Made with silk cotton and shoulder bows and sash
Formal maternity dress with floral fabric and bow ties at shoulder
Floral DIY shoulder tie dress gown for maternity, baptisms, postpartum, weddings, and photoshoots
DIY maternity dress with tie shoulders, sash, and couture sewing techniques
postpartum formal dress
Couture Maternity Gown for weddings and photos. Made with floral cotton silk and shoulder bows
White Maternity Dress with red rose florals for weddings, photos, and baptism
Maternity Dress for weddings

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