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Quick Project – Kids T-shirt Mod!

by Dot 12 January 2010 2,724 views 3 Comments

newshirt1A lot of people liked the super easy sewing of the Treeskirt project, so here’s another quick and easy project!

My son has a favorite t-shirt that was getting a tad small… he wore it layered with a long sleeve shirt to a party the other day, which gave me the idea to make a long sleeved, slightly larger shirt out of it for him to wear this winter and spring.*

I forgot to take a “before” pic, but you’ve seen t-shirts and long sleeve shirts before, so just imagine them, hehe.

So, Here’s how I did it.

Materials:
1 long sleeve (LS) shirt (can be just outgrown, so the sleeves are a little short)
1 short sleeve (SS) t-shirt (still fitting around the body, but short)

For my long sleeve shirt, I used a red waffle weave shirt that he refuses to wear because it has buttons at the neck and they bug him. Weirdo. Another neat twist might be to use a buttondown for the long sleeves.

Here’s some visual instructions for those who like pictures, see below the pic for more details! (Click to see large):

instructions
(get the illustration from flickr)

Sleeves:
Cut the sleeves off the long sleeve shirt.
Trim and re-sew the sleeve if necessary so that it fits inside the SS shirt sleeve.
Turn wrong side out and slide the cutoff sleeve over the hem of the SS shirt.
Pin, and sew it on**.

Bottom:
Cut about 3 inches off the bottom of your long sleeve shirt, all the way around so you have a big loop of cloth.
Turn both wrong side out. Slide the loop around the bottom of your SS Shirt hem. If it’s too big, hem the loop smaller and cut off the excess.
Pin the loop to the SS Shirt, overlapping the hem, and sew around the bottom to attach.

With a black t-shirt and black thread, even messy stitching doesn’t really show up, so take the color of the shirt into account if you’re a novice.

As you can see, he thinks its totally stylin’!

*This idea is not original to me – I’ve seen it done around the web — if you have other examples, post them in the comments!

**My child is 4, and his sleeves are so small to try to sew. But I came in through the neck of the shirt and crunched everything up under my sewing machine… Just guide carefully with your fingers and go slow so you don’t end up sewing the sleeve together. You could also hand stitch if it’s easier.

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3 Comments »

  • Joanne said:

    Great re-purposing! Thanks for sharing!

  • Jessi said:

    This is such a great idea! My nephew keeps outgrowing his t-shirts; I’ll have to see if my sister would want to give this a try.

  • Dot (author) said:

    thanks!
    I’d love to see other versions!

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