Today I have something totally new and exciting for your reading pleasure. Anshu from Blooms and Bugs has graciously offered to swap blogs with me today. Anshu is a pro at sewing and a mega-pro at working with knits and creating beautiful and fun clothes for little girls (and big girls like us!). She has an etsy store as well so I hope you will all stop by and give her some love.
Now just look at what she offered to share with us today. It is fashionable and thrifty way to turn a summer tee into a cute fall top. Now, I don't do clothing tutorials here on Ricochet and Away!, so this is indeed a treat worth savoring!
Enjoy,
Supplies ( 2 year old size) 1 half sleeved Tshirt 1 XL Tshirt in a contrasting color ( or any knit fabric will do - using T shirt was much quicker because I didn't have to hem)
Adding the full sleeves:
Cut off the sleeves from the adult tee.
Lay the small Tee straight and place the sleeves from the big tee next to the small Tee sleeves. Make sure that both the Tee sleeves and the new sleeves make a straight line and overlap about half inch. Now measure from the shoulders of little Tee to the hem of sleeves of big Tee, this is how long your final sleeve will be. Compare it with the sleeve length needed for your child.If this is too big, increase the overlap to reduce the length. If it is too small you have two options - 1 You can pick open the hem of sleeves, this will give you one extra inch. you could do rolled hems on the sleeves later. Another option is to use T-shirt body, or a knit fabric instead of sleeves. This is not very complicated either. Just fold a knit fabric along the width and use it the same way I'm showing you using the existing sleeves. You just have to hem these sleeves...that's all. Once you have determined the correct length you have to determine the width. What we want to do is make an addition to the sleeve that is as wide as the existing sleeve's end in and then it tapers off following natural shape of arm. So you will measure the width using the hem of existing sleeve and add 1 inch to it for sewing margins.
Do the same for the other sleeve.
Now fold each sleeve in half along the width ( right sides together) and sew a seam on the side using up sewing margins. Repeat for the other sleeve.
Turn this tube of sleeve inside out. Now line it up with the real sleeve as shown above. Now gently slide the wider end of new sleeve into the existing sleeve. Straighten both the sleeves using your hand. Make sure the new sleeve is fitting the old sleeve evenly. Use hand basting or pins to hold it in place.
Sew a seam along the joint of the new and old sleeves to fix it in place. Note: It is easier to go from the neckline to sew this seam, at least it was for me. Repeat for the other sleeve. Ta da! Your tee has full sleeves now...smile!
Adding contrasting stripes at the front.
Cut two rectangles from the contrasting knit of width equal to the width of Tee and length = 5 inches. Place them one over the other and then onto the Tee at a position you like.
Pin or hand-baste these to make sure they stay in their place.
Now sew parallel lines along the hand-basting. Mine are about 5/8 inch apart. You can use your sewing machine foot as a guide to get evenly spaces lines.
Once you're done sewing, its time to cut. Cut between the seams, Making sure you're cutting only the extra layers and not the Tshirt itself. I used a small scissor to do this. Try to stay in the center between two seams but you don't have to be precise. We are taking advantage of the fact that knits don't fray. So we can leave the cut edges raw.
Congratulations! You have successfully Octoberized your Tee. Right now the orange is looking like a color-block at the front, but these knit strips will curl up in the wash.
So they look more like ruffled stripes of orange and white. For more pizazz you could use more layers, and also graded color layers. So when you cut, you will see colors of different intensity. I haven't done that but I think it would look cool.
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