DIY J Crew Astrid Sweater with Ruffles

Remember the pink sweater I started after seeing the project over at Orange Beautiful? It’s finished!

DIY Ruffled Cardigan - Mighty Girl

Is this not the grown up version of a tutu? It is quite possibly the pinkest thing I have ever owned. When I wear it, I smell like Bing cherries in a bed of warm cotton candy.

The original J Crew Version was $425, and isn’t available anymore, but I followed the step by step on Orange Beautiful to make this one.

I did things a little differently, because her version required more patience than I could muster, so here’s a run through if you want to make one for yourself. Start with a jacket or slightly boxy sweater, and then embellish it thusly:

1. Buy some fabric. The original rosettes are silk charmeause, but I chose polyester chiffon, because I wanted the flowers to be fluffy instead of cascading. You’ll need about 4 yards of whichever you choose.

2. Cut the fabric in strips and fold it to size. You want your petals to be about 4″ H x 2.5″ W. So I cut my fabric in strips, then folded the strips in half several times until I had a stack of material about the right size. This doesn’t need to be an exact science, but you want something that looks kind of like this:

3. Sew a knot in the middle of the stack to hold the pieces together, and then cut along the folds to create a grouping of square “petals.”

4. Cut the corners off the stack of squares until you have a roughly oval shape:

5. Here’s where it gets a little tedious. Take three layers of fabric at a time, bunch them by hand, and then pass the needle through a few times until you have the ruffles you want. Repeat with the next three layers and so on, until you have a finished rosette:

6. If you don’t like the effect, go back in with your needle and tease apart any layers that are too clumped or whatnot. The back of my rosettes looked like this:

7. When you have about 30 flowers, attach them to your sweater or jacket by hand. I’d wait until you’ve mostly finished the flowers to affix them, because your rosettes will get better as you go along, and you’ll want the prettiest ones up by your face, right? (I didn’t do this, and I wish I had).

8. When all the flowers are affixed, fill in any gaps by sewing down the top and bottom petals of the flowers in areas that need attention.

9. Pull away any stray threads from the flowers’ raw edges.

10. Wear your sweater around the house for a few hours, and pause to trade bon mots with imaginary dignitaries whenever you pass a mirror.

Cute! Now where am I going to wear it? Someone please get married. Thank you.

44 thoughts on “DIY J Crew Astrid Sweater with Ruffles

  1. Oh my, I am so glad I have found your blog and the courage to wear color — I am a redhead who has spent a decade or two wearing white, gray, black and occasionally green, fearful that all the pretty oranges and pinks and reds would clash. How wrong! You look totally gorgeous in this color, redheaded sister!

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  2. Gorgeous! And yes, I was born and currently live in the South, and honey, you don’t need to wait for an occasion. I would wear that over to my neighbor’s house for a beer.

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  3. Haha! I was thinking just what Cheri and Becky wrote — why wait for a wedding? Unless it’s my wedding when I make this sweater and marry it because I love it so much!

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  4. It is gorgeous and that color is great on you! You should be so proud for hacking JCrew!

    I wonder, though, as someone who just might try this: won’t the rosettes fray like crazy when the sweater is washed?

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  5. The sweater is vintage cashmere picked up at a flea market, so I only dry clean it anyway. The machine would tear it apart.

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  6. Beautiful!!! I L-O-V-E that you made this yourself – why wait for a wedding – Just wear it around town.

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  7. Um, I’m getting married in August. In Texas. Hopefully you can find another reason…like it’s Thursday. Fantastic!

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  8. That is such a pretty and feminine sweater. I lack the talent and, more importantly, the patience to make one of my own. I agree with all of my Southern sisters. Wear that sucker to the grocery store and hang out in the produce department singing like Mary Poppins! That’s appropriate in a sweater that cute!

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  9. This is very lovely and putting this on my “stuff to make” project list. Thanks for sharing it with us!

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  10. So fabulous! How did you attach the flowers to the sweater? I think a little girl version of this with several different colors of flower would be really cute, too.

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  11. Beautiful! And it sounds pretty easy. I mean, time consuming and possibly grueling, but not too hard for a semi-sewer to accomplish.

    And yeah, we in the South would wear that just anywhere. I wish I had it on right now in the coffee shop!

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  12. LOVE it! I’m going to add this to my project list. Should have one of my own in 20-30 years šŸ™‚

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  13. Gorgeous. I will keep all this information for when I don’t live in Southern California with one-million degree weather year-round. I love the color.

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  14. Maggie!! This is so beautiful!! You did a fantastic job, and as always, you totally rock this style.

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  15. Just about the cutest damn thing I’ve ever seen. And come on! In San Francisco? You could wear that to the nearest tacqueria or bookstore or bar or park.

    You should be patting yourself on the back for that one.

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  16. Perrine, go for it.

    Also, I obviously need to move to the South. You should see all the forlorn flouncy sundresses in my closet.

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  17. I have my face mashed up against my screen for a closer look. Good god that is beautiful.

    Now someone just needs to get out to the flea market and find me a sweater … Any volunteers?

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  18. It looks amazing and I adore the color on you–vibrant colors look fantastic with your coloring.

    I have to say, I was partially inspired by that cardigan DIY–only with a different J.Crew product–a trench with a ruffle at the collar. I’d feel sorry for them if their prices weren’t so high!

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  19. That is so pretty! I want to make one!

    By the way, you and everyone else who might make this should know that the easiest way to cut strips, or any straight line, in chiffon is to tear it. Just cut a 1/2″ or so snip in the selvedge, then grasp the fabric on either side of the snip and pull. You will have a perfectly straight cut!

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  20. No need for a special occasion, this looks as fabulous with a T and jeans as it would with a nice dress. Wear it whenever you want!

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