Lucky Bedskirt. (Tailored, Adjustable From Ready-Made Curtains and Coverlets)
An email appeared in our inbox recently with the subject: Lucky Bedskirt. It read:
Just wanted to let you know: I have had the Eileen Fisher linen bedskirt on my bed for several years and loved her (their) approach to the whole thing. I changed bed sizes and there is nothing on the market of any interest! And, then, somehow, I came across your post . . . and within seconds was ordering curtains from IKEA.. Genius! I am not in anyway a crafty, DIY-er, but even I could do this! Thank you so much!!!
It references a post published here in 2016 about how to make a bed skirt out of Ikea’s classic Merete curtains; it’s a play on a clever, expensive Eileen Fisher bed skirt that is no longer available. It’s one of the many practical improvisations we featured a lot in the old days.
After we transformed a linen sheet into a bed skirt, we stumbled on Eileen Fisher’s clever bed skirt made of three adjustable panels of fabric for a more tailored look. You just tuck each panel underneath the mattress at the foot and sides of the bed to adjust it to any length you like up to 21″ (just what we need since the height of our bed occasionally morphs…) But the lengths of the panels were a couple of inches short for our bed AND we weren’t crazy about the oatmeal color (not to mention the price). Googling other versions of the adjustable skirt yielded terrible colors and fabrics but gave us insight into how they work.
We started mulling how to make our own. Then we had a brainstorm.
We remembered how versatile Ikea’s cotton Merete curtains ($39 per pair) were in various spaces we had in the past. The ready-made curtains come in sizes that could easily morph into a bed skirt. Because the grommets at the top of them are meant to loop through a curtain rod, these curtains are wider than normal.
We did some calculations: Our bed was 60″ x 80″. One 98″ x 57″ Merete curtain could be cut lengthwise up the center to make two hemmed bed skirt panels that would amply fit the long span of our bed. The cut sides would be hidden under the mattress so there would be no need to hem them. Since there was 18 inches of extra length, we would fold neat corners at each end.
Sally Schneider
The remaining curtain would become the panel for the bottom of the bed, laid over the two side panels. We wouldn’t even have to cut it, but could just tuck the whole thing under the mattress.
It actually meant us cutting only ONE curtain, and that cut didn’t even have to be perfect. We just folded the curtain lengthwise and cut it up the center. We’d iron or steam out the creases before putting it on the bed…
Sally Schneider
….Here’s the foot-end corner without the mattress to cover the fold. (We did a sort of inverted hospital corner, where the top flap isn’t angled, but rather squared off. (This video gives the gist of the fold.)
Sally Schneider
Eh voila: a tailored, adjustable, bed skirt that hides the many items stored under the bed. The essential approach could be easily applied to other kinds of curtains: just make sure to check the sizes as curtain sizes are not standard. Once the mattress and covers are on, the bed skirt looks as good as any we’ve seen…
We love that bed skirts allow us to store, and hide, my ugly trove of foamcore and other useful materials stored under the bed, and gives a sweet, crisp look to the room.
Although Improvised Life is no longer publishing new content, its vast archive of evergreen articles is available for you to explore for free. If you find joy or inspiration in what you find, please consider supporting Improvised Life to keep it in the world.
It only take a minute to make a secure donation. A little goes a long way.
var thickboxL10n = {"next":"Next \u003E","prev":"\u003C Prev","image":"Image","of":"of","close":"Close","noiframes":"This feature requires inline frames. You have iframes disabled or your browser does not support them.","loadingAnimation":"https://improvisedlife.com/wp-includes/js/thickbox/loadingAnimation.gif"};
//# sourceURL=thickbox-js-extra
var js_vars = {"url":"https://improvisedlife.com/wp-content/themes/ippo","admin_url":"https://improvisedlife.com/wp-admin/admin-ajax.php","nonce":"183f013c82","no_more_text":"No more posts to load.","startPage":"1","maxPages":"0","is_type":"scroll","paging_type":"infinite-scroll","posts_type":"posts"};
//# sourceURL=ippo-js-functions-js-extra