Brown Blazer Vest

I have several jackets left over from the 80’s when we all were wearing oversized jackets with huge shoulder pads. Don’t laugh – I know you wore them too. I don’t have a before pic of the real jacket since I started taking it apart a few years ago in an attempt to completely retailor it. Alas, I don’t have the patience or the skills to do a job like that so I decided that I’d work with what I have. Which by now was an oversized vest. Perfect!

after removing sleeve

The lining was still hanging on for dear life, so I cut it away. I was pretty sloppy about it because, well because I was lazy.

and off goes the lining

While playing around with it, trying to figure out how to finish the sleeve I came up with this rolled binding that doesn’t look too tailored. Just the effect I was going for.

rolled binding

closeup of rolled binding - come on you know you wanted it

Once I hand stitched the binding in place I was done.

The end result - I love it!

 

 

The boots were wrong - had to change the boots.

 

 

Drowning in Denim

No Boundaries Basic Flare Jeans

I found a pair of $5 Walmart jeans which were too short, but since the plan was to cut them off into denim shorts I happily handed over my fiver. When I got home and looked into my shorts drawer I saw that I already had three pair of denim shorts. Wa-wa!

Getting dressed later I was wishing for a pair of white denim shorts when it hit me – bleach ’em. One hitch though – they’re made of 31% cotton, 54% ramie, 14% polyester and 1% spandex. I wrote to Dr. Laundry over at Clorox.com – which BTW is a great resource for all kinds of cleaning and laundry dilemmas – and this is her reply:

Hi Kat;

This is a great question. Because the fabric includes a small percentage of spandex, you should not wash the shorts with Clorox Regular-Bleach since it can cause yellowing of this fiber type. You could try Rit Color Remover (available at drug stores) to strip the color (I’m assuming the shorts are blue, although denim does come in a variety of colors) but it’s difficult to know how successful you will be at getting the shorts to turn white. A lot depends on what type of dye was used, and how well it was applied. Also, denim is made by weaving colored yarns with white yarns–if the polyester portion of the yarn is colored, Rit won’t likely strip that away. Testing a hidden part of the shorts first with a few drops of the Rit solution is a good idea to see what change you might expect from the treatment. If you decide to give the Rit a try, please let me know how it turns out, and thanks for writing.

–Dr. Laundry

I then asked Dr. Laundry if bluing might help with any yellowing – and here is her answer:

Hi Again–

That’s great that you have extra fabric from the cut-off pant legs that you can experiment with. I’m not sure how effective bluing would be at masking any yellowing that may result from stripping the color. Bluing imparts a faint blue color to fabric that is perceived as white–depending on how much yellowing there is and how concentrated the bluing solution is, I suppose you could end up with a slight green tint to the fabric! This is where having all that extra fabric to experiment with will be very helpful. I can’t wait to hear how it turns out. Be sure to take some pictures, too!

–Dr. Laundry

Luckily – since these were cut offs I have plenty of fabric to do a test run – or two – or three. I’ll do what it takes to get my white denim shorts. Of course if they don’t turn out I may end up dying them, but that’s Plan B and I haven’t even started on Plan A yet. So back to the bleach bucket.

Update: I bleached the heck out of those denims and they didn’t change color one little bit. The takeaway here? If you’re buying something that’s not a natural fiber don’t  expect to be able to rely on bleaching or dying to make any significant changes. Since I also realized that these jeans are not very soft and I’ve been avoiding wearing them the other takeaway here is that no amount of refashioning is going to make a stiff fabric soft. I’m not a denim tote bag sort of gal so these denims will be donated.

 

Green Silk Babydoll Top Gets a Grown Up Makeover

This was a too-cutesy babydoll top with ribbons that tied in the back. I’ve had it in my closet for years but was long past ever wearing it again. Because it was made of silk AND I loved the fabric I kept in my closet “just in case”. Just in case I turned twelve again!

The refashion was so simple. I removed the ties and set them aside for another refashion project. They’ll make great straps for a summer top or ties for a wrap skirt. Note, I ended up tying a knot in one of the ties and using it as an emergency hairband.

Then I cut the top horizontally across the middle of the top two inches below my bustline. Because the fabric is so lightweight it needed something to keep it from riding up every time I moved. I used a zig-zag machine stitch to attach some beaded fringe all around the bottom of the top. This also allowed me to avoid hemming the silk which is a bit beyond my skills. Silk is slippery!

I used a zig-zag stitch on the raw edge of the bottom portion of the top, which is basically a tube. Then I hand stitched five inches along the same edge using black elastic thread, pulling the thread to create a gather. I did the same on the opposite side of the tube. This gather allows me to wear this as a shawl and also around my waist. And when I want to wear it as a scarf the gathered portions don’t interfere with the drape.

I love that I ended up with a three-fer refashion.