Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Modernise an old oversize tee in 30 minutes!

This little tank has already become one of my "go to" little numbers. Layered under a cardi for now of course but I know this is going to be in heavy rotation in the summer too. It's a shape I feel really comfy in and is so easy to refashion from an oversize tee....


Here's the obligatory before & after! See how much more flattering it is without the sleeves and with a bit more fitting around the "boobettes"?! (I'm not usually one to intentionally direct someone's gaze to my boobettes, but there's a point I'm trying to illustrate and, well, I feel I've known you long enough now not to be prissy about it!)...


The key to this is finding a tee with a drop shoulder seam like this. (Essentially where the shoulder seam extends past the shoulder. The sleeve part will have a super shallow, almost non existent sleeve head because there is practically no armhole curve). Then remove the sleeve by cutting it away very close the the shoulder seam line...the "old" shoulder seam, will become the new sleeve hem...

You can see how shallow the armhole curve is below. With the sleeves removed, the armholes are way to big for the look I was aiming for. See where the yellow pin is in the first pic? Well in reality I ended up 2 stripes above that! But essentially, try it on in front of a mirror, and pinch closed the armhole until the armhole fits you comfortably and resembles a cap/kimono shape, as opposed to a big flappy gaping armhole! Mark that point with a pin. Then sew from that point down & blend your line of stitching down into the side seam. Trim away the excess...

You should have the original overlocking from the shoulder seam still attached. Turn under and stitch down...

As a finishing touch, I cut away the neckline ribbing....

I really love this little tee. The original garment cost me £1 from the local charity shop and is a really good quality jersey. I think it was one of those "yachty" sailing type brands. In any case, this took about 30 minutes. So in an afternoon, with a stash of thrifted T shirts, you could have a whole array of new summer tank tees for a few quid!
Nice huh?!

4 comments:

Jennifer Elliott said...

Oh my goodness! I have to try this with some of my shirts that have a drop shoulder. The shirt looks much better with the cappish sleeve. Great job!

Adele said...

I really like that. Quick and easy but very effective.

Adele - EOD

Unknown said...

I have a pile of drop sleeve Tees, so will try this myself. Good job!

Anonymous said...

Really cute shirt! But I really love your hair!!! Lovely color, and love the style too!