I have not yet found a way to extend an existing model, but i can assure you that training your own model is far more efficient than using all the classes noones wants.
If it still interests you, this person had a similar question: Loading a trained Keras model and continue training
This is his finished code example:
"""
Model by: http://machinelearningmastery.com/
"""
import numpy
from tensorflow.keras.datasets import mnist
from tensorflow.keras.models import Sequential
from tensorflow.keras.layers import Dense
from tensorflow.keras.utils import to_categorical
from tensorflow.keras.models import load_model
numpy.random.seed(7)
def baseline_model():
model = Sequential()
model.add(Dense(num_pixels, input_dim=num_pixels, activation='relu'))
model.add(Dense(num_classes, activation='softmax'))
model.compile(loss='categorical_crossentropy', optimizer='adam', metrics=['accuracy'])
return model
if __name__ == '__main__':
# load data
(X_train, y_train), (X_test, y_test) = mnist.load_data()
# flatten 28*28 images to a 784 vector for each image
num_pixels = X_train.shape[1] * X_train.shape[2]
X_train = X_train.reshape(X_train.shape[0], num_pixels).astype('float32')
X_test = X_test.reshape(X_test.shape[0], num_pixels).astype('float32')
# normalize inputs from 0-255 to 0-1
X_train = X_train / 255
X_test = X_test / 255
# one hot encode outputs
y_train = np_utils.to_categorical(y_train)
y_test = np_utils.to_categorical(y_test)
num_classes = y_test.shape[1]
# build the model
model = baseline_model()
#Partly train model
dataset1_x = X_train[:3000]
dataset1_y = y_train[:3000]
model.fit(dataset1_x, dataset1_y, nb_epoch=10, batch_size=200, verbose=2)
# Final evaluation of the model
scores = model.evaluate(X_test, y_test, verbose=0)
print("Baseline Error: %.2f%%" % (100-scores[1]*100))
#Save partly trained model
model.save('partly_trained.h5')
del model
#Reload model
model = load_model('partly_trained.h5')
#Continue training
dataset2_x = X_train[3000:]
dataset2_y = y_train[3000:]
model.fit(dataset2_x, dataset2_y, nb_epoch=10, batch_size=200, verbose=2)
scores = model.evaluate(X_test, y_test, verbose=0)
print("Baseline Error: %.2f%%" % (100-scores[1]*100))