About a month ago, I was perusing the clearance racks at Rainbow  (one of my favorite ways to get sidetracked while shopping for groceries  at Giant), when I came across this decidedly wild deep magenta fuzzy  double-layered top with a built-in necklace. At three dollars, it was  within my price range, but not usually the price range I reserve for  weird-looking clothes like that, which would obviously get minimal air  time in my daily rotation—especially once you consider its bulky  construction and dolman sleeves (
a pretty big disqualifier for making it into my wardrobe).  However, because it was actually a tube top plus the outer layer  (attached at the waist, but nothing a pair of scissors and a seam ripper  couldn't fix), and it came with a necklace, I figured it amounted to 1  dollar a piece, which is a pretty good bargain.   
Plus, I was feeling a stirring in my bones that told me it was  time to attempt a more ambitious DIY than the re-hemmings and re-sizings  that have basically been my life this summer, and I couldn't think of a  more inspiring palette than a purple, glittery, as-yet-unstructured  mass of fuzz.

One look at the top draped over my frame was enough to convince me  it had to change. Big-shouldered shirts are my enemies, but I have  recently developed kind of an affinity for them if they only have one  shoulder. I think the asymmetrical fit and single bare shoulder creates a  dramatic silhouette without making me look enormous. So I set out to  turn this top into a one-shouldered piece of work.
 
My first step was to simply pull my arm through the neckline and see how it looked. Pretty blobby. Next, I took all the fabric from the left shoulder and bunched it  up around the vicinity of my waist. A critical eyeballing determined  that, yes, this could work. 
So I took the shirt off, pinned the fabric  in place more thoroughly, and then wrapped and pinned the free end of  the left sleeve around to the back, so as to get a better feel for how  it would look when finished.
I liked it, so I took my trusty sewing machine and stitched a seam  over the bunched fabric down the left side, fixing both layers of the  front firmly in place.
Now I had to decide what to do with the fabric in the back. Did I  want it to drape low, revealing more of the tube top? Or high, for a  more conservative look (As conservative as one can get when one is  wearing a Tarzan top made of glittery purple fur!)? Did I want it to be  bunched up in back as it was in front? Or go for a smoother surface?  After a couple of experiments with the exact positioning, I decided on  no bunching and a straight hem from shoulder to waist.
This necessitated cutting a bit of the fabric from the back and a  quick hemming of the resulting raw edge. I didn't have to be too precise  during this bit, because furry fabrics like this one hide a multitude  of sins (a.k.a poorly stitched hems).
Then I lopped off the  remaining excess fabric from the back and the left sleeve. 
 
The only  thing left to do was to wrap a few stray edges of the left sleeve under  the edge of the back and sew it down. Fortunately, again, I didn't need  to create any neat seams because the fabric was so fluffy that all the  raw edges were well disguised.
Sewing done, the shirt was complete, but I still had one more  idea! Since I had a lot of fabric left over and I've been so into  headbands lately, I decided to make a matching headband from some of the  extra material!
I cut a strip about 2 inches wide in the middle and narrower at the ends, then sewed the two ends together. 
 
Tada!
I wore this shirt and headband, with the original necklace, to dinner and a movie in Baltimore a few weekends ago (
DIY-blog procrastination  has struck again, explaining the delay in posting). I even went all out and changed up my purse  (something I only usually do for special occasions) to better match the vibe of the outfit. While we were eating, one bartender asked me  if I'd made the outfit myself. Typically, getting asked if you made it  yourself is not something you want to hear in regards to your clothes  (it signifies shoddy workmanship and/or a lack of refinement), but she  explained that she thought it might be because the two pieces matched  and it was cute. So I'll accept that as a compliment.
 
Sadly, I had no idea that my camera was utterly failing to capture  the many poses I sent its way on self-timer. So here's a collection of  blurry pictures that together, I hope, present an adequate portrait of  how the whole ensemble looked.