Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is such an easy fix. If you can sew a button, you can fix this.
Pinch the armhole in until it fits you. Judge the distance from the side seam -- I generally take in between one and two inches.
Take the garment off and lie it on a flat surface. Fold on the side seam with the armhole edges flush with each other. If you are taking in an inch, draw a line from an inch from the side seam and run it down until it meets the seam. Stitch on this line.
(Wish I could find a picture! This is super easy to do.)
So if I'm imagining this correctly, the altered garment will have an inch or two of excess material on the inside, right? Because of the new seam that was sewn?
Yes. A little triangle under the armpit. You can trim it out or just leave it be.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is such an easy fix. If you can sew a button, you can fix this.
Pinch the armhole in until it fits you. Judge the distance from the side seam -- I generally take in between one and two inches.
Take the garment off and lie it on a flat surface. Fold on the side seam with the armhole edges flush with each other. If you are taking in an inch, draw a line from an inch from the side seam and run it down until it meets the seam. Stitch on this line.
(Wish I could find a picture! This is super easy to do.)
So if I'm imagining this correctly, the altered garment will have an inch or two of excess material on the inside, right? Because of the new seam that was sewn?
Anonymous wrote:This is such an easy fix. If you can sew a button, you can fix this.
Pinch the armhole in until it fits you. Judge the distance from the side seam -- I generally take in between one and two inches.
Take the garment off and lie it on a flat surface. Fold on the side seam with the armhole edges flush with each other. If you are taking in an inch, draw a line from an inch from the side seam and run it down until it meets the seam. Stitch on this line.
(Wish I could find a picture! This is super easy to do.)