Filed under: Finished it, Fixed it, How to do it, Love it, Made it, Refashioned it, Thrifted it | Tags: alter, black, blouse, shorten, sleeves, wardrobe refashion, wrap
I was playing with short sleeve a while back by making new short cuffs, and by resetting the whole sleeve to preserve the original cuffs.
Thrifted a long sleeved black cotton blouse this week because of the great wrap detail – a button plus tie with a cummerbund sort of detail – and decided, so I can wear it to work, to do the simplest shortening of all – a basic chop and hem – while watching the nightly news.
You can see the long sleeve as a before, and the sleeve I shortened as an after.
Flip the blouse inside out to work with it. Mark where you want the short sleeve to end, cut straight across, and then hem using this failsafe method: Measure an inch from the raw edge, fold up wrong sides together and press. Then fold the raw edge into the fold, and press again. Tack with a few pins, then stitch with a basic straight stitch. I like to use excised sleeve #1 to mark and cut sleeve #2.
Doesn’t get much easier – unless you chop and wear, a la t-shirts.
Filed under: Fixed it, How to do it, Love it, Made it, Refashioned it, Sewed it, Thrifted it | Tags: blouse, cuffs, How to do it, reset, ruffled, Salvy, short, shorten, sleeves
The shortening obsession continues. And resetting sleeves is an important skill when taking in giant t-shirts and blouses and all because more than an inch removed from the sides sets off the shoulder seam. This refashion started with a black ruffled blouse from my favorite Salvy that was four sizes too big for me. There was something about it I liked enough to plunk down the $.90; mostly, it’s the ruffled placket and the cuff detail. To keep the cuffs as is, I essentially moved the whole sleeve up.
Here’s how:
1. REMOVE SLEEVES.
Flip the shirt and, pick out the stitching, or if the top is really huge on you, cut off at the seams. Press.
2. FIT BODICE.
Pin the sides of the top so it fits you. Try it on and repin as necessary. Get the fit right now. Chalk between pins and sew along the chalk lines. Trim seam edges and finish as you like. I’ve serged the seams on the blouse.
3. MEASURE SLEEVES.
Flip the detached sleeves inside out and flatten, with the seam line on one side. Measure from your shoulder how many inches you want the short sleeves to be. I did about 8″ for this blouse so the ruffled cuff detail would remain.
***Here’s the trick–
4. GATHER SLEEVE TOPS.
Use a pin to mark the midpoint of the top of the sleeve. If you want puffy sleeves, use a long basting stitch to gather the edge. Try on the fitted bodice, considering where you want the shoulder to fall. If the original top was huge, you’ll have to trim the armhole opening so the shoulder seam lies on your shoulder.
5. SEW SLEEVES BACK ON.
Pin sleeves on, matching underseams, and the top seam with the pin in the sleeve. Gather the sleeve top, pinning as you go. Try the thing on. Move pins accordingly. Baste. Sew and finish edges as you like.
Filed under: Fixed it, How to do it, Love it, Made it, Refashioned it, Sewed it, Thrifted it | Tags: blouse, cuffs, How to do it, purple, reset, salvation army, Salvy, short, shorten, sleeves
There’s barely a whiff of spring in the air, but my latest obsession is shortening sleeves anyway.
I’ve done two recently, one when the original shirt fits, and one when it’s gigantic. This purple Jonathan Martin blouse has sweetly unnatural purple pearl buttons, but the long sleeves made me feel frumpy. I decided to shorten the sleeves by refashioning a cuff.

Here’s how–

1. CUT SLEEVES.
Measure how long the shortened sleeves should be, and add an inch for sewing. Mark that point, use a ruler to draw a straight line and cut. Repeat on other side.
Cut a 4-inch piece off the biggest end of the sleeve to make a new cuff. Pick out the stitching, and cut into a pair of 2-inch strips. Sew or press interfacing onto the wrong side. Fold strips lengthwise -right sides together- and measure them again the part of the arm where they’ll sit. Add an inch for overlap, then sew the ends shut. Trim and turn the right sides out.
3. SEW NEW CUFFS.
On the raw sleeve end, baste a few inches around the sleeve crease, and gather the raw end. Pin the raw edge of the cuff against the right side of the sleeve. I pinned the new cuff on so the overlap would fall on the front of my arm. Baste, fit, stitch.
4. REPLACE BUTTONS on CUFF.
Remove the buttons from the original cuff and sew onto the new cuff where it overlaps.
Voila!
after… and before

