How to make your own shirt extenders

( Meer dan 1.000 relevante resultaten, met Ads Verkopers die hun onderneming willen laten groeien en meer geïnteresseerde kopers willen bereiken, kunnen Etsy's advertentieplatform gebruiken om binnen hun items te promoten. Je ziet advertentieresultaten op basis van factoren zoals relevantie en het bedrag dat verkopers per klik betalen. Lees meer. )

  • How to make your own shirt extenders

    Dress Extender, Top Extender, Extended Skirt, Shirt skirt, Denim Skirt, Mini Skirt, Mini Shirt Skirt, Lace Dress Extender, Extend Shirt

    Advertentie van shop DIYCraftsKingdom Van shop DIYCraftsKingdom

    5 van 5 sterren (1,910)

    29,85

How to make your own shirt extenders

I just love when a DIY fixes two problems in one! Button up shirts are just not my thing, I love them in theory but in practice they look pretty bad on me. The collar draws attention to my double chin, there’s always boob gape and I always come off looking pretty fat and frumpy. When I really focused on what I liked about button ups, it was the layering aspect.

How to make your own shirt extenders

Last year I embraced leggings hard and I’ve even been making my own. Leggings are really comfy and they do show off my legs nicely. I still prefer to wear things that cover my butt though, leggings aren’t pants. And that’s a hard thing because most of my tops are too short. I do have lots of stretchy skirts, which work over leggings but not over skinny leg jeans. Then it hit me! I could turn some button up skirts into tee extenders. Oh how I love garments that do double or triple duty! These shirt extenders can be worn with tees, cardigans and jumpers, transforming much of my wardrobe.

How to make your own shirt extenders

There are plenty of jumpers and tees that have a second layer or are designed to look like you are wearing a shirt underneath. I love the idea but don’t really want a single top, I want something that transforms my existing tops. Shirt extenders totally exist ( I plucked all of these from Pinterest)but most of the ones I’ve seen are sort of lacy or feminine in a way I’m not really going for. I really wanted that shirt over leggings look, so as always, a DIY is the way!

How to make your own shirt extenders

Since I didn’t have any button ups, I hit the op shops and found  leopard print shirt. I thought of going sheer but I wanted more bum coverage that that so I chose a silky but opaque shirt. The shirt basically fitted me, it was a couple of sizes too big. You want to choose a shirt that loosely fits over your hips/tummy but not too loose or it will be quite gathered. I tried on my shirt and decided where to cut it.And now you have seen this gorgeous photo, you’ll know why I don’t wear button ups! The things I show you guys…

How to make your own shirt extenders

Since I have a big round belly, anything elasticated works it’s way to my slimmest point, my natural waist. So I planned on cutting my skirts so they would sit there. If you don’t have that issue, just decide where you’d like the extender to sit. I marked the cutting point with a pin and whipped the skirt off. I added some seam allowance to my marker pin and marked straight across the skirt. I cut along my marked line and I was read to sew.

How to make your own shirt extenders

My fabric would definitely fray and I wasn’t keen to add waist bulk, so I used the mock overlock stitch on my sewing machine. You could absolutely use and actual overlocker/serger but I wasn’t bothered enough to get it out. If you were using a really light fabric, a chiffon perhaps, I would mock or real overlock (or just zig zag) the edge and then double fold like a normal hem. If you want to see how the mock overlock works, I have a slo mo in my mexican table runner post.

How to make your own shirt extenders

I folded the now overlocked edge over enough to accommodate my elastic (I had fairly skinny 6mm elastic) and sew a straight stitch all around, except I left a 5cm gap to thread in my elastic. I threaded in the elastic, making sure both ends were sticking out and tried the extender on. I decided how long the elastic should be and sewed the ends together at that size. Once the elastic was in place, I sewed up the gap in the waist.

How to make your own shirt extenders

I tried the shirt extender on and played with the gathers. I felt it looked best when most of the gather was at the back, leaving the front ruffled but not bulky. So I arranged the gathers as I wanted them and pinned through the elastic at the side seams. I put a quick stitch in the side seams, just like in these skirts, to keep it that way.

How to make your own shirt extenders

And then I had a sweet little shirt extender! I wore it to my Sewing Group (come join us!) for it’s first little outing. I wondered if anyone would notice that the rest of the skirt was missing… No one commented (maybe they are polite?) and so I asked them if they had noticed. I got a round of, ‘Huh, now you mention it’ and ‘Oh, I hadn’t noticed!’. So I flipped up my tee and showed them my glorious trickery! They loved the idea! Beautiful Brita and I share a love of 70’s polyester and Brita thought it would be a great way to make some wearable shirt skirts from some of the shirts she had been holding on to. I have to say I love this idea more than my own! So in you have some unloved shirts and too short tees, you know what to do……

How to make your own shirt extenders

How to make your own shirt extenders

Share