This is EXACTLY what I needed. I was watching videos where people remove the collar completely but my husband is not fond of that style of shirt. I have 5 or 6 in a pile that have this type of wear and couldn't figure out what to do. The shirts are perfect other than this wear from his whiskers. Thanks so much! New subscriber here from Canada. :D
Thank you! It was exactly what I was looking for. I remembered that my grandma used to reverse the collars on my fathers shirts, but I was unsure how to do it. Now I can repare the shirts, too :)
Great little video,showing how easy it can be to do this job.Keep this in mind before I get rid of a shirt,just because the collar is frayed.Nice suggestion on the Mandarin type collar as well.
I actually did this back in the 1970s into 80s no doubt my mum or aunt taught me how , as they grew up in really hard times financially , plus the WW11 years there was a ration book system so you couldn't easily buy things , so again the main thing was to extend the wear of what you had
Hi!!! For the office shirts, there is a plastic strip being put inside the collar on the reverse side, so when we turn the collar the plastic strip comes in the front. How to go about it then???
This is EXACTLY what I needed. I was watching videos where people remove the collar completely but my husband is not fond of that style of shirt. I have 5 or 6 in a pile that have this type of wear and couldn't figure out what to do. The shirts are perfect other than this wear from his whiskers. Thanks so much! New subscriber here from Canada. :D
Thank you! It was exactly what I was looking for. I remembered that my grandma used to reverse the collars on my fathers shirts, but I was unsure how to do it. Now I can repare the shirts, too :)
Great little video,showing how easy it can be to do this job.Keep this in mind before I get rid of a shirt,just because the collar is frayed.Nice suggestion on the Mandarin type collar as well.
Thank you!! My hubby's shirt was too good to throw away. I'm fixing it thanks to you!!
thanks for this! My gran was also a master of making things last
Thank you this was a great help! I was able to do this thanks to you .
I actually did this back in the 1970s into 80s no doubt my mum or aunt taught me how , as they grew up in really hard times financially , plus the WW11 years there was a ration book system so you couldn't easily buy things , so again the main thing was to extend the wear of what you had
Thank you
Hi!!! For the office shirts, there is a plastic strip being put inside the collar on the reverse side, so when we turn the collar the plastic strip comes in the front. How to go about it then???
That looks so much better. But I have to confess that the other side being tatty would bother me. Any ideas on that?
Excellent
Great, thanks very much for the demo. hopefully I can do this to my OH's brushed cotton shits that hw lives in!
It's generally not that easy to find how the collar is attached to the shirt. It shouldn't be visible to the naked eye - unless it's a cheap shirt.