Alright, so you wanna know about this Harry Styles sequin jumpsuit I tackled? Man, let me tell you, it was a journey. Not just a ‘grab some fabric and sew’ kind of thing. More like a ‘question all your life choices while covered in tiny, shiny demons’ kind of thing.

Getting Started – The Dream vs. Reality
It all started, like most of my questionable projects, with a picture. Saw Harry rocking one of those incredible sequin numbers and thought, “I can do that!” Famous last words, right? The confidence was high, the actual skill set? We’ll get to that.
First off, finding the right fabric was a mission. You can’t just use any old sparkly stuff. It needs that drape, that insane shine. I swear I looked at a million samples. Some were too stiff, some shed glitter like it was their job, and some cost more than my rent. Finally found this one stretchy sequin fabric – black, of course, classic. But even then, I knew cutting into it was gonna be a nightmare.
The Actual “Making Of” – Or, The Sequinpocalypse
So, I got my fabric. And a pattern? Ha! I basically had to Frankenstein a pattern together from a couple of old jumpsuit patterns I had, tweaking it here and there. Lots of measuring, lots of drawing, lots of hoping for the best.
Then came cutting. Let me tell you about sequins. They fly. Everywhere. I had sequins in my hair, in my tea, the cat was probably sparkling for days. It was like a glitter bomb went off in my craft room. And cutting through them? My good scissors were crying. I switched to a rotary cutter on a mat, which helped, but still, tiny plastic shrapnel everywhere.
Sewing it was the next level of… fun. Here’s what I learned:

- Regular needles? Forget it. You need denim needles, or even leather needles sometimes, and even then, they break. Often.
- You gotta go slow. Like, snail’s pace slow. If you rush, the needle hits a sequin wrong, snaps, and you’re back to square one.
- Seam allowances are tricky. Do you pick the sequins out of the seam allowance? Some people do. I tried, got bored, and just kind of… muscled through it. Probably not best practice, but hey.
- The inside! You absolutely, 100% need a lining. Imagine wearing raw sequins against your skin. Nope. So, I added a soft jersey lining which was basically like making a whole second jumpsuit.
There were moments, man. Moments where I just stared at this half-finished, chaotic pile of sparkle and thought, “Why am I doing this to myself?” I’d mess up a seam, have to unpick it – unpicking sequin fabric is a special kind of torture – and just walk away for a bit. My partner learned to tread lightly when the sewing machine was making angry noises.
The Finishing Touches (and a bit of relief)
Getting the zipper in was a whole saga. Invisible zipper, on sequin fabric, with a lining. Yeah. Lots of hand-basting involved. And then there were the cuffs and the neckline, trying to get them neat without too much bulk from the sequins.
But then, bit by bit, it started to look like… well, a jumpsuit! A very, very sparkly jumpsuit. The first time I tried it on and it actually fit, and kind of looked like the vision in my head (minus the rockstar aura, obviously), that was a good feeling. A really good feeling.
Was it easy? No. Was it quick? Definitely not. Did I learn a lot? Absolutely. Mostly about my own patience, or lack thereof, and the surprising durability of my sewing machine. Would I do it again? Ask me in a year, once the trauma (and the stray sequins) have fully faded.
But yeah, that’s the story. A lot of trial, a lot of error, and a whole lot of sparkle. It’s not perfect, not Harry Styles stage-perfect, but it’s mine, and I wrestled those sequins into submission. Mostly.
