Sewing for my man

hooded cardigan men by thisblogisnotforyou.comHi my darlings, guess what happened? After all those years of selfish sewing I have finally made something for my man. It had been on my to-sew list pretty much every year, and last year I even went as far as making a muslin for a men’s shirt. The Mr doesn’t really wear shirts, so as you can imagine this project didn’t go very far. (I have to say though, I finished a shirt for my dad in December – not blogged – so I could tick “men’s shirt” of last year’s resolutions list).hooded cardigan men by thisblogisnotforyou.comA friend of mine made her boyfriend this pretty awesome hooded cardi and I promised the Mr to make him one as well.

The pattern is self-drafted by my friend who is a seamstress by trade. She traced it off for me and the Mr even carried it in his suitcase all the way from Germany to London – that’s dedication! Obviously, I couldn’t postpone it much longer and finally ordered some fabric and a zip, the latter being ridiculously expensive!

The Pattern: Is self-drafted, EUR size 48. It has raglan sleeves and an extra side panel just underneath the armhole which makes the cardi just a tad more fitted, which I think looks great, especially men’s patterns this size can sometime just look huge. I lengthened all bodice and the sleeve pattern pieces by 5cm (the Mr always has troubles with sleeves being way too short). I did not bother cutting any facings and now am really glad that I didn’t. My sewing machine struggled quite a bit with 3-4 layers of this heavy sweatshirt fabric, any more would’ve killed my little machine, I guess.hooded cardigan men by thisblogisnotforyou.comhooded cardigan men by thisblogisnotforyou.comThe fabric:
The sweatshirt fabric I ordered online (I think it was Minerva Crafts) and I used less than 2m for this cardi. I also bought the zip (75cm) online, which was really expensive. But it’s a metal one and works really great. I’m glad that I got it in the end, it adds a great feature to the jacket.

hooded cardigan men by thisblogisnotforyou.comhooded cardigan men by thisblogisnotforyou.comThe sleeve cuffs and the “waistband” are made of the same fabric as the rest of the cardi. I had trouble finding matching ribbing fabric, and the one I ordered did not work at all. I just used the same fabric in the end, cutting the strips much shorter than the actual hem width and it worked really well! I sewed them in with the overlocker, stretching the fabric evenly while sewing and they went in without any puckering and cinch in the hems quite beautifully.hooded cardigan men by thisblogisnotforyou.comAnother great detail of the pattern is the hood. It had really interesting seaming details – the hood consists of three different pattern pieces. All the seams on the bodice match up exactly with the seams on the hood giving it a really great shape and sporty look. I lined the hood, under-stitched the lining and top-stitched it with my 4mm stretch twin needle (approx. 2cm from the edge). I used the same technique on the pockets.hooded cardigan men by thisblogisnotforyou.comhooded cardigan men by thisblogisnotforyou.comhooded cardigan men by thisblogisnotforyou.comThe Mr loves his music, so I had to add tiny buttonholes to the back of the pockets where the audio jack can go through when the phone is in the pocket to avoid the cable dangling on the outside of the cardigan.

The only thing where I messed up a bit it the seam matching on the pockets. They are almost off by 5mm which is quite annoying. That happened when I sewed the zip in. All other seams match up perfectly, only the most visible ones don’t. Meh. At least you can’t see it, when the zip is open :)hooded cardigan men by thisblogisnotforyou.comhooded cardigan men by thisblogisnotforyou.comhooded cardigan men by thisblogisnotforyou.com

The Mr is super duper happy with his new cardigan and wears it pretty much every day. I am planning to make a hooded sweater from the same pattern and already have super soft dark brown fabric waiting in my stash. Unfortunately I broke my stretch twin needle, so it will have to wait a bit. (And we don’t want the Mr to get used to all this selfless sewing, right?)

Have you ever made anything for your other half? It’s quite rewarding, me thinks. And finally, I wasn’t the one in front of the camera – much more comfortable, ha!


Happy sewing!
β™₯

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15 thoughts on “Sewing for my man

  1. I really like the seaming on the hood, as well as how the zip extends past the body and onto the hood, unlike the most of the RTW hoodies you see – it stops it looking like just another American Apparel hoodie!

    1. Thanks, Rachel! I also love the way the hood was drafted, without it the jacket would really look quite boring.

    1. Aww, thanks Meg! That’s the look I am always trying to go for, so glad that I appear to have succeeded πŸ˜€

  2. Wow, it looks awesome. I love your iPod feature and the hood detail. Any chance you’ll be digitizing your friends pattern…and she’ll be selling it?! Lol

    1. Probably not πŸ™‚ She works as a seamstress, so I doubt she’d enjoy publishing patterns in her leisure time – unfortunately πŸ™‚

  3. Its fab, the pocket seams really don’t notice at all! and along with all the other comments i love that hood seam too!
    This year I am challenging myself to a ‘man sew’ every month . You are inspiring me to get on with this months must finish it sooooon…well done to your Man for posing …
    bestest daisy j x

  4. This is excellent! My man doesn’t really wear shirts either so this would be great as it’s exactly what he’d pick out in a shop. Well done πŸ™‚

  5. My other half wants a trench coat (any ideas for a pattern for a classic trench would be greatly appreciated). I mostly sew for the kids. I think that’s because things don’t have to fit great for them to love it, and if it’s a bit of a fail, they’ll out grow it soon enough πŸ™‚

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