It depends on the context. It wouldn't normally rhyme the way that you pronounce appareled, but if you put old first and have a good rhythm going with your writing, you can lead the reader to pronounce it differently, and thus, make it rhyme.
If you are not old, and you rhyme with grew, you are new.
Old king Cole was a merry old soul and a merry old soul was he He called for his pipe and he called for his bowl and he called for his fiddlers three.
The poem "When You Are Old" by W.B. Yeats is written in iambic tetrameter, with a rhyme scheme of ABBA CDCD.
Old mother hubbard
Mold & Fold
Old Mother Hubbard is a fictional character from a nursery rhyme, and in the rhyme, she is often depicted as living in a shoe.
Old Mother Hubbard's dog is typically referred to as "Rover" in the nursery rhyme.
Old King Cole
The tarts, according to the old nursery-rhyme, for no clear reason beyond rhyme!
The poem "The Old Playhouse" by Kamala Das follows an irregular rhyme scheme. It has a free verse form, which means it does not adhere to a specific rhyme scheme throughout the poem.
* bold * cold * fold * gold * hold * mold * old * told
The nursery rhyme you are referring to is "Old Mother Hubbard."