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You are here: Home / Sewing Projects to Make / Sewing Clothes / Schoolhouse Tunic – PDF Pattern review

March 26, 2018 BY Fran

Schoolhouse Tunic – PDF Pattern review

schoolhouse tunic 3

I found a nice looking pattern at Sew Liberated called the Schoolhouse Tunic pattern. The front is really nice for a great layered look and the back has a nice flow to it.

Electronic patterns are a bit cheaper than traditional patterns. Living in Canada, the cost for this pattern for me was $18.57 CAD (converted from $13.95 USD @ 1.331182 ). I really wanted to make something with this kind of different neckline, so I eventually bought it.

Preparing the Pattern

After the pages and the pattern pieces were printed, I decided it was time to get some tracing paper.  With the tracing paper on top, I traced out my size and put away the bulky paper pattern. I had been hesitating on the tracing paper because, well, I just thought it added another, possibly unnecessary, step to sewing. Now, I’m actually glad I finally decided to use tracing paper – it was much easier to cut out the actual fabric – perhaps because the weights held the pattern down better?

Tunic #1

For my first Schoolhouse tunic, I used a fabric I had in my stash.  It was a little heavier than called for but I like my clothes to have a bit of weight. I re-folded the selvages edges to get the most out of the material (still following the grain-line). I noticed that the fabric was really fraying a lot.  I read a blog about the tunic (site is no longer active) where the sewer serged all the raw edges of the cut pattern pieces!  I hadn’t heard of that before, but decided to give it a try for the bodice pieces. Incroyable!  It worked really well and even helped me keep the top stitching straight.

SIDE NOTE:

A few weeks ago I adjusted the tension and foot pressure on my serger for a fabric I was practicing on.  I haven’t been able to adjust it back to the regular serger stitch and I have big loose loops.  Until I can get it tweaked back, I can’t use it much.  I miss using the serger 🙁

The Bodice

So, as this was a test run of sorts, I was very careful with constructing the bodice. The pattern suggested some top stitching as an option and with the serged edges it wasn’t too bad. Overall, I really liked the construction of the top bodice.  The bias binding across the back of the neckline gave a great finished look and I even got to do some actual hand stitching to finish off the shoulder seams.

The Skirt

On to the skirt. I didn’t serge as my fiddling had made the stitches even worse and I figured the bodice was the most important.  Well, I could not line up the skirt – there was too much fabric even with the pleats.  The fraying was getting worse and I noticed that it was coming out of the seams.  I was going to have to go back and serge it after all.  I put it that aside for now until the serger is ready.

Tunic # 2

I really liked the fit of the pattern though and I did have a kind of light flannel in my fabric stash too.  I could get away without any serging necessary – right?

I did much the same but without the serged edges, I decided not to do all the top stitching around the collar but just the side seam.  I also finished the inside shoulder seams a bit better this time.  I still seemed to have so much extra material in the skirt part so I created a second pleat in the front for a total of four.  Since the fabric was a kind of plaid, the extra pleat looked really nice I thought.  I love the way this tunic sits in the back too.

Results

I wore the dress length with a red shell underneath and leggings to our Thursday night dart league.  It was so comfortable.  I realized that the length was actually quite long and wondered if a shorter one might be nice too. The sleeves came out about 3/4 length on me which was great.

Tunic #3

I like this pattern a lot and so on to a third try.  I used a fabric with a bit of stretch, not quite a stretch fabric, but more a woven made from stretchy fibres.  I’m not sure because again I raided my stash and I’m just not that good at fabric classification yet.  This fabric was the lightest of all them so far and I almost added some interfacing to the bodice.  Since I’m still in testing mode, I continued without it though.  There really was no need to serge the edges either as it was quite stable.

For variation, I made it considerably shorter in length and made the sleeves full length.  Also, I discovered the source of my “extra material” problem in the skirt. When I had traced out the the pattern piece for the back skirt, I cut the top bottom and one side only.  I didn’t cut the fourth edge out.  This ended up adding about 4 inches, or at least 8 inches of extra fabric from the fold.

I cut out the proper size this time and everything lined up perfectly with the front pleats falling right under the front side seams.

Results

This time I wore a light black shell under the tunic which was also longer that the skirt.  It looked really nice but pushed the boundaries of casual wear I think.  I would be more comfortable with this version as an office outfit.  Since I did feel a little over-dressed at our regular Saturday night poker game, I added a black and white infinity scarf with a skull pattern on it to strike fear into my opponents.

I won one of the three games we played, so my clever intimidation ploy must have worked a bit!

Final Thoughts

I highly recommend this pattern – a very fast and satisfying sew with good instructions and options.  The fit and flow of the finished garment is flattering and I love the unique neckline.  Will definitely be making more and I have to go back and finish Tunic #1 too!

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