Make a Batwing Shrug – Sewing pattern & tutorial

batwing shrug pattern

A batwing sleeve is a long loose sleeve which is cut one with the bodice and has a deep armhole tapering to a tighter sleeve hem.

This is a shrug with that beautiful and comfortable sleeve and an open draping front.

How to make the Batwing Shrug


Step 1 – Cut out pattern pieces

Take two fabric pieces 48 ” wide and 24 ” long . Fold the first one by the center and mark the back pattern as follows

Mark a line parallel to the top edge 7.5 inch down. (A-K)

Mark 1/4 of bust round on this line (K-I) Mark this on the top edge as well (A-E) intersecting at I.

Mark 4 inch diagonally from I-H as in the picture

Mark Sleeve length E -F = 14″

Sleeve width F-G = 6.5 inch or 7 inch

Mark 3.5 inch from the corner (A-J) This is the neckwidth.

Mark 1 inch down from A -B This is the neck depth. Draw a curve from J – B

batwing shrug back pattern - cut this also on a fabric folded by half

 

On the next fabric piece, which is also folded by the center, mark the front pattern. This is the same as the back pattern, except for the neck depth which is 2 inch here, and the length; the back pattern is longer. The front pattern is  cut down the center fold line as in the following picture

 

The pattern is marked and cut

batwing shrug free pattern - mark the pattern on folded fabric

how to sew a shrug - the front is cut by the middle

Step 2 – facing

A facing pattern of 6″ width is made mirroring the front opening and neckline.Checkout the post on facing for more details.  Finish the outer edges of the facing pieces with a zig zag stitch or serging

 

shrug diy pattern - facing pattern for the neckline and front

Keep the facing on the front opening and neck of the front pattern pieces right sides together and stitch in place.

how to make a shrug -keep the facing on the neckline and sew in place

You will have to clip the seam allowance at the corner and along the neckline so that the facing will turn smoothly to the backside

batwing shrug -make small snips

Turn the facing to wrong side of the pattern pieces and top stitch in place. Press before stitching so that everything is in place.

turn the facing to the back and top stitch the edge
Turn the facing to the back and top stitch the edge

Step 3 – Bind back neckline

Bind the back neckline with a bias fabric tape.

how to make a batwing shrug -bind the back neckline

Stitch the binding in place

sew a batwing shrug

Step 4 – Join the shoulder seams

Keep the front pattern pieces and back pattern piece aligned one by one rightsides together. stitch along the shoulder seams ( red line)

sew the shoulder seams of the shrug

how to sew a batwing shrug

Step 5 – Hem sleeves

Hem the sleeve edge. Turn under the edge twice and stitch. Remember to press the shoulder seams open before stitching the hem

batwing shrug sewing pattern- sew the sleeve hem
Sleeve hem

Step 6 – join sides of front and back pieces

Stitch the side seams.

Stitch the hem of the shrug. I used a bias tape to bind the hem. Checkout the post on making a bias tape here.

batwing shrug

Related posts :  What is a shrug; Make a lace vest; Make front tie chiffon shrug 

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Author: Sarina Tariq

Hi, I love sewing, fabric, fashion, embroidery, doing easy DIY projects and then writing about them. Hope you have fun learning from sewguide as much as I do. If you find any mistakes here, please point it out in the comments.

6 thoughts on “Make a Batwing Shrug – Sewing pattern & tutorial”

  1. Anjali Deo

    Thank you for sharing.Encouraged to sew.

    Reply
    • Sarina

      🙂

  2. Melanee

    Thank you for this lesson and pattern! I used the drafting pattern lesson for the drapey jacket to teach our daughter for her homeschooling lesson in sewing. That was her very first pattern drafting lesson. She finished it in a short time and was encouraged that she could do it so fast.
    Your lessons are easy to follow, you make pattern drafting easier for beginners to understand. Thank you!

    Reply
    • Sarina

      Thanks for the kind words 🙂 so happy to be of help to your girl . It’s nice to hear of young ones sewing .

  3. PG

    You make sewing and patter-making so effortless. I don’t have to be intimidated anymore. Thanks for sharing. Be blessed.

    Reply
    • Sarina

      Thank you so much for the encouraging words. Nothing to be intimidated about – fabric is flexible . Choose a beautiful one and you can rarely go wrong 🙂

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