 This hand-me-down blazer didn't seem a likely candidate for my  permanent collection, what with its puffed sleeves and extremely tight  fit, but it did have something going for it: a cute neckline. I liked  the curved lapels and neatly  cinched waist. If I removed the sleeves, I thought it might make a  useful vest.
This hand-me-down blazer didn't seem a likely candidate for my  permanent collection, what with its puffed sleeves and extremely tight  fit, but it did have something going for it: a cute neckline. I liked  the curved lapels and neatly  cinched waist. If I removed the sleeves, I thought it might make a  useful vest.
What follows is my favorite method for converting a sleeved shirt into a sleeveless one.
Since  the place where the sleeves meet the bodice already comes with a neatly  sewn seam, it makes a really nice edge for the new armhole.
Sometimes,  I double-fold the hem to completely protect the raw edge, but that's  finicky, time-consuming, and hard to get right on the first try, so for  my own convenience (especially when sewing something I'm not sure I'll  like anyway), I usually just leave the raw edge uncovered and zigzag  stitch over it to help stop fraying (in the picture, it's the row of stitches on the right—pictured after I'd already finished the project.)
Once  the raw edge is somewhat finished, I fold the fabric to the inside of  the armhole, pin liberally, and stitch it down with a narrow hem (Photo shows the bottom of one of the armholes after sewing was complete).
Normally, I'd call it finished right about here, but with  this particular garment, I wasn't quite done, because it was  tight as a corset! To buy myself a little more comfort, I opened up most  of the seams around the sides and back. They had been originally made  with two rows of stitches (shown in picture), so I removed the innermost row on each of  four seams, gaining about an inch of total breathing room. 
Since the remaining seams were rather weakly serged, I reinforced each one with a single row of straight stitches.
At  the bottom and top of each seam, the construction was a little more  complicated. To do it right, I would have had to pick out and re-sew a  number of seams. But I did it the lazy way and just left those parts  untouched. So if you're looking closely, you can see puckering where the  parts I opened meet the parts I didn't open. Later, I may revisit those seams to see if I can taper them more gracefully, but for  the vest's first wear, I kept them as-is.
I  finished this project in the fall, but I don't have much use for vests  in the winter (as I mainly use them to cover up bare shoulders and  backless dresses), so the vest's first day of employment came in June,  when I wore it to office-ify a spaghetti-strap sundress. 
 
 
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