I own several skirts without pockets.
Thankfully I have some jackets WITH pockets.
I pair them and get by.
I abhor carrying a purse!
I saw a skirt made from a pair of jeans -
LOTS of pockets.
The jeans were cut off like a yoke, and fabric for the skirt was attached. Why didn't I think of that?
My wardrobe brain expanded ...
I looked through my stash of old jeans.
I hate spending money unless I have to.
(But sometimes it is better to pay for what you need.)
They ALL had lots of pockets - too many for a skirt.
I don't WANT pockets on my skirt backside.
A second hand shop furnished a few nice options- for about $1.99 - I liked the front/details and pocket free seat. One was actually a skort - I will use it for another skirt my imagination is already conjuring up - hmmm - and I decided a tan pair may become the yoke on another skirt I have already ... more on that later if this one works.
I noticed skirts were also quite inexpensive - sorry, don't remember how much but they were all less than $5. I picked one with an elastic waist (not too flattering as it was - kind of 'tent-ish') and an interesting border print in denim colors.
I cut off a pair of jeans and threw the legs in my 'denim-quilt-someday' box.
I measured the skirt length against another skirt I have, cut an amount equal to the yoke off, and threw the top of the skirt into the trash. (Be sure to allow a seam amount on both pieces.)
I sewed them together by making more or less equal flat pleat/tucks around the entire skirt and hated it - YUCK!
UGLY!
Why? ... the yoke seemed too deep.
I took out the seam and shortened the yoke.
I also adjusted some of the pleat/tucks to lay flatter.
Ooops - now, although I liked the skirt fine, it was a bit shorter than I wanted it. I cut a piece of lining from my fabric stash into a basic a-line skirt shape the same length as the skirt piece (plus a seam for the top and bottom), fished the top of the skirt from my trash, cut it into equal-width strips, attached them end to end and gathered them onto the edge of the lining. A narrow rolled hem finished the bottom edge on both the skirt and ruffle edge.
I made the lining several inches wider than the width of the skirt at the yoke seam so that I could make some tuck/pleats to accommodate the fullness of the main skirt layer. I used the same flat pleat/tucks as before and staggered them to avoid adding fullness in the hip area and attached the lining to the yoke/skirt seam.
The effect is a narrow ruffled under layer.
I find I like how the lining acts like a slip under the soft gauze-like skirt fabric and provides the skirt with some substance - a weight it seemed to need to balance the weight of the denim.
I still felt it needed a little perk of some kind ...
I looked at several border print skirts and noticed they all have beads or sequins so I attached a few random, homeless, unmatched beads from my bead box. Mostly translucent light blues in interesting shapes with a few silvers in several sizes.
Viola! - a new wearable skirt WITH roomy pockets.
Do you need one too?
Dropkick, or Selena Gomez
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It’s drizzling rain, and in the half-light of late afternoon, streetlights
are stuttering on in twos and threes. The students straggling out of
after-schoo...
7 years ago