This was useful for me when we created a new branch for a new major release, but were still working on our current version as well. I cloned our repo again and kept the new project on our new branch, but also wanted to get my stashes there.
git stash show -p > patch
You'll have to specify your stash and name your file whatevery you want. Do this for as all your stashes, and you'll have patch files in your pwd.
cd /new/project/dir
git apply /old/project/dir/patchfile
git stash
I tried it on Windows and the apply didn't work until I opened the patch file in Notepad and saved it again with UTF-8 encoding instead of UTF-16LE.
After a little testing, this issue occurred because I ran the stash command from PowerShell.
Running the stash command from Command Prompt created it with UTF-8 encoding.
Otherwise, worked great!
Big thanks!