The Sensational Shower Curtain to Raincoat Refashion

Ahhh, the joys of Autumn in Berlin: humid with that odd little chill that creeps into your bones topped off with non-stop drizzle & mist from the sky. The perfect weather for a light enough to layer, completely waterproof yet totally funky raincoat – but where does one find such amazing outerwear?

You make it of course, my darlings with The Sensational Shower Curtain to Raincoat Refashion tutorial!

Snag a waterproof fabric shower curtain & a few buttons from your stash.

Slice off the edge with the shower curtain hook holes and set it aside for now (it will eventually be re-used as the button-up closure for your raincoat).

Fold the shower curtain in half with right sides facing & the fold at the top. Place a loose fitting cardi or jacket on the center of the folded fabric & use it as a guide to mark either side of the the neckline area + the basic shape of the sleeves & body.

Chop out the general shape of your raincoat as shown above (keep the chopped pieces handy to create the funky cowl-esque hood).

Stitch the raw edges together.

Slice straight up the middle of the front layer of the raincoat & cut out the shape of your desired neckline.

Snag that chopped shower curtain hook piece, cut to size & pin to one side of the front of the raincoat just below the neckline (right sides facing).

Stitch together.

W A R N I N G !  W A R N I N G !  W A R N I N G !  W A R N I N G !

Shower curtain material is insanely slippery and thus requires loads of concentration – if you’re paying more attention to keeping that annoyingly slick fabric in place than how close the needle is to your thumb, you just might stitch straight through poor Mr. Thumbkin! Ouch!

This project literally contains my blood, sweat & tears – making it extra gross unique!

Let’s move on to the hood: Snag the 4 pieces you chopped out to create the basic raincoat shape at the beginning, stitch them together into a large square, fold it in half with wrong sides facing & sew all of the sides together to create a rectangle.

Fold the rectangle in half & stitch one end together (you should now have a folded edge & 2 open sides).

Pin the longest open edge of the hood to the neckline of the raincoat & stitch them together.

Hem up any raw edges, arrange and stitch on the buttons.

Create a fancy belt from the scraps and you could be done…

instead of simply hemming my raw edges I took a trip to insanity town and decided to bind every single seam!

But it was definitely worth it!

I love my rockin’ shower curtain raincoat!

Pssst! My awesome e-courses are right over here!

Transform your entire wardrobe for pennies with my groovy CoaR tutorial collections right here:

10 Comments

  1. yvonne says:

    my local market in turkey has some fantastic shower curtains , printed with pictures, for less than the price of a daily newspaper, can’t wait til sunday to pick a couple more up!

    1. Fantastic! Be sure to share a photo on my facebook page if you make a raincoat 😀 https://www.facebook.com/ConfessionsofaRefashionista/

  2. I like the binding too. What an awesome idea….I really need to get my sewing machine fixed! It crapped out right in the middle of a project a few weeks ago and I haven’t taken it in yet.

    1. Ach! That’s the worst…whenever it happens to me (which is often with my retro Necchi machine) I give it some TLC with a good cleaning & oiling and that usually does the trick to get the old gal humming again! 😉

  3. Meg Miller says:

    Restyle4Life beat me to it – Brilliant!

  4. That’s brilliant. I love that you added the red detail binding. Makes it look so professional.

    1. Cheers Vee…the binding was a crazy amount of extra work but absolutely worth it for the extra unique result!

  5. That’s so cool! I was thinking of making a rain cape from some kind of waterproof fabric, but they are all so stiff – must check out shower curtains. Also, there are some lovely designs of shower curtains, like the periodic table… ooh 🙂 Yours looks so fun.

    1. Thanks very much! 😀 I redecorated our bathroom so I simply used our old Ikea shower curtain – upcycling at its best! 😉

Comments are closed.

Check out these fab posts too!