

As the temperature falls, I’m always looking for that new statement coat of the season, and guess what? I found it! Check out Mood’s newest pattern; the Clark Coat is made here in a classic boiled wool. This gorgeous new coat has stylish sleeves, is perfect for this fall weather, and will instantly be your new favorite coat of the season!



Purchase Materials Used Below:
- 4-5 yards Ketil Sunflower Solid Boiled Wool or Ketil Deauville Mauve Solid Boiled Wool
- 3-4 yards Mood Exclusive Rays of Gold Stretch Cotton Poplin or Mood Exclusive Day in Tunisia Yellow Cotton Poplin
- 1-2 yards Off-White Weft Fusible Interfacing
- Optional: 1/2 yard Black Fashion-Weight Faux Leather for Collar Stand
- MDF271 – The Clark Coat Sewing Pattern (free download below!)
Alternative Recommended Fabrics:

Step 1
Notch all pieces, then cut interfacing pieces.
Step 2
Press interfacing to all the pieces that need it. Interface on the wrong side of your front pieces, right where the welt pocket will be placed.
Step 3
Mark your welt on the outside of your fabric using chalk or a pen.
Step 4
Fold your four welts in half, press, and baste shut. Mark a 1/4″ with chalk to use as a guide when sewing.
Step 5
Place welts on the right side of your fabric on top of the lines you drew. Pin and sew. Make sure you end evenly at each end.
Note: the welts could stretch a little depending on the fabric you are using, so be sure to use a lot of pins and a walking foot to evenly feed your fabric layers through your machine.

Step 6
Place the pocket bag over the welts, pin, and sew the pocket bag.
Step 7
Cut through the pocket bag, then the final fabric leaving ½” triangles at both ends.



Step 8
Flip the pocket to the inside and press.
Step 9
Make sure welts are even and sew over the triangle, but not through the main layer of outer fabric. Make sure you get up all the way to the edge of the welt opening.


Step 10
With faces together, fold your pocket shield in half and sew along the sides. Trim, turn right side out, and press.

Step 11
Keeping your pocket bag flat, place the raw edge of the pocket shield to the inside of your welt, sew a 1/4″ from the edge. Make sure the folded edge of your pocket flap will be facing your side seam once it’s folded over.
Step 12
Press the flap over the welt and topstitch 1/4″ along folded edge.
Step 13
Keeping the pocket bag lying flat, topstitch the sides down.



Step 14
Fold the pocket bag right sides together, pin and stitch.
Step 15
Sew the center back seam down to ½” from the vent, press the seams open, and topstitch the seams down. Since this fabric is thick, I used a 4.5 topstitch.


Step 16
Fold the vent in ¼” and hem the sides. Then fold the left side in 2″ and slip-stitch to the wrong side of your coat fabric.


Step 17
Pin front and back sections together at shoulder seams, sew, and then topstitch.

Step 18
Pin side seams together, matching notches. Sew and then topstitch.

Step 19
Get your sleeve pieces and mark the pleats/notches. Pin and stay stitch the pleats, then sew the inseam. Once completed, topstitch the seam before setting it in the armscye.
Step 20
Set in the sleeve matching notches.

Step 21
Get your sleeve cuffs and sew the side seams of all four pieces.
Step 22
Get your two interfaced cuffs and attach them to your sleeve matching the seams, pin, and sew.


Step 22
Attach the facing at the bottom of the sleeve, pin, and sew.
Step 23
Now fold the facing into the cuff and press. Finish the facing by folding ½” under and slip stitching it shut.


Step 24
Sew the lining pieces together starting with the facing and the side front. Pin and sew.
Step 25
Pin and sew the side seams together. Now attach the shoulder seams together.
Step 26
Sew sleeves to the lining matching at notches.


Step 27
Pin under collar to collar stand, stitch at 3/8″.
Step 28
With right sides together, stitch collar sections together around the edge, leaving the bottom open. Trim corners, turn right side out, and press along the outside. Note: Do not press directly on faux leather.
Step 29
Pin collar to the right side of the jacket with the faux leather undercollar facing down. Match notches and pin.



Step 30
With right sides together, pin lining around the entire jacket, leaving the bottom open. Make sure all the seams line up correctly. Sew, trim seam allowance around the corners, press, and topstitch using a 4.5 stitch length.
Step 31
Hem the kick pleat of the lining by folding the sides in twice and topstitching.
Step 32
Now attach the top of the kick pleat to the inside of the main fabric by hand stitching it down.


Step 33
Fold the hem up 1″ and slip stitch.
Step 34
Hem the lining up 2in and hand sew placing it slightly over the hem you just did. Make sure there is enough give in the length of the lining it doesn’t pull on the hem. (An alternative option is to leave the lining open along the hem and simply tack it at the side seams.)



Amazing Coat Pattern I love IT
This fastidious. Thanks
Love the pattern, wish there was a video tutorial to go with it…..this would help so many of us
Now that I have spent close to $200 on the material and have actually sewn this together, I will say that the instructions are poorly written to go along with small amount of photos. I do not expect much from a free pattern but at least have the instructions written better and the pdf proofread. The actual PDF is not layered so you waste a ton of paper printing sizes you do not want AND the pocket welt pattern piece is technically missing. The piece labeled “pocket welt” is actually the pocket shield. If you are a beginner I would suggest you follow the general guidelines for a coat if using this pattern (you could buy a better written coat pattern and still create this style coat), but if I were not an experienced garment sewist, I would not have figured this out as a beginner. I sew and photograph tutorial patterns for a few companies and have never read anything this poorly written. However, if the photographs were better detailed or if there were more for each step (Since some steps are also missing from these instructions) I think this particular one would have been better. Mood Fabrics is soooooo good as far as quality, I expect more form the Mood Sewciety part.
It’s an amazing coat. Unfortunately, I’ve been trying to download the pattern for two weeks but I still didn’t receive it yet.
Can you please help me?
Hello Sam, I’m sorry to hear that! Just email info@moodfabrics.com and they’ll send the pattern to you! 🙂
Hello,
Love the pattern. I would like to make the other type of pockets, the ones on the yellow coat. How do I make these?
Hello! I think those pockets might have been self drafted, which would be easy to recreate! And I think they were just folded under at the edges, pressed, and sewn.
Bonjour,
je voudrais signaler un problème que j’ai rencontré durant l’impression du patron.
Plusieurs des pages sont sorties de l’imprimante noir. Je pense que ce problème est lié au lien du patron car j’ai essayé d’imprimer les feuilles manquantes sur 2 imprimantes différentes. Mais elles aussi sont ressorties noir, je ne comprends pas. Si une ou deux feuilles étaient sorties de cette manière cela n’aurait pas été compliqué mais la, il me manques 9 pages sur une grosse partie du patron . Alors auriez vous un conseil à me donner et avez vous eu une erreur de se cas avec d’autre clients?
pour finir si vous avez besoin que je vous communique le nom des pages manquantes n’hésitez pas.
merci de votre compréhension.
Bonjour Constance, nous avons essayé d’imprimer le patron et toutes les pages se sont bien déroulées ! Cela peut être un problème avec le fichier lui-même et nous vous recommandons de supprimer et de retélécharger le fichier.