As a reminder, this is what it looked like:
Actually, my little adventure began a few days earlier, when I drug the little beauty out to the garage and ravaged it.
My mom turned me onto a product called Restor-A-Finish, made by Howard. She used it--with great success--on my dad's heirloom upright piano, and my aunt used it on it to restore some 1960s era kitchen cabinets. After I striped my chair of her cheap vinyl seat, and set about restoring her luster.
Howard, your ish is da bomb! Who knew the veneer on my little chair was so freaking stunning! Restor-A-Finish brought out the lovely wood tones, the complex swirl patterns of the grain, and made the beautiful, delicate lines of the piece really stand out.
My next task was removing the vinyl from the seat bottom. I've really gotta hand it to the original assembler of this piece; their utter LOVE of metal staples was wholly evident. It literally took me longer to remove the staples than it did to restore it!
I took this opportunity to make sure all the joints were secure by tightening screws and malleting blocks back into place. The chair oughta survive another few decades!
So that brings me back to where I put my lovely sweet potato (YAM) soufflé in the oven. Armed with quilting batting and a staple gun, I set about dressing up my freshly restored chair.
Now, I'm sure there are a myriad of ways to reupholster chairs, ways that are easier and more elegant than what I did, but I'm a novice and naïve and have an over-blown sense of self-confidence, so this is what I did.
First, I used the seat as a template. I rolled out the quilting batting and set the seat on top. Using a fine-tipped permanent marker, I traced the seat onto the batting.
Next, I more or less carefully cut out the batting using standard scissors.
The fabric I decided to use for this application has a very subtle diamond pattern to it. I don't know my fabrics too well, so all I can say is it's like a synthetic velvet and it's pretty and soft. Since the pattern is very subtle, I wasn't too worried about getting the lines straight/making it perfectly symmetrical, so I just placed the wooden seat on top of the wrong side of the fabric, and traced the shape out using the permanent marker again. When I cut it out, I cut about 1" from the line so I would have enough fabric to accommodate the batting and easily staple to the seat. In retrospect, I probably should have cut 3" so I'd have more fabric to grab, but it worked out ok with LOTS of tugging with just the 1".
Here's a shot of the seat, the batting, and the fabric.
Surprisingly, the original batting was still in decent condition, so I decided to reuse it and ignore the icky thought that a myriad of people have farted into the batting over the years. Here you can see the different layers.
I turned everything over, and got ready to staple. Now, if I had been S M R T, I would have thought ahead to put the side of the seat that already had the screw holes in it facing up so when I went to reattach the seat, I didn't have to bore new holes, but I'm clearly not S M R T and forgot to do that. If you try your hand at reupholstering something, be S M R T and make sure you can easily reattach the seat after you're through.
I first stapled all four corners of the fabric to the board, pulling the fabric taut as I stapled. Divide and conquer!
Then I stapled the middle of each side's length, again pulling the fabric taut.
Not a bad start. Here's what the right side looked like.
I continued pulling the fabric, and stapled to my heart's content. And I wanted to be extra certain that the fabric wouldn't rip, so I stapled stapled stapled the corners until I'm sure there's more metal than wood!
Here's what it looked like after I got all the staples in.
As I finished up boring new screw holes into the seat, the timer on the oven went off, and I removed my beautiful sweet potato (YAM) soufflé.And then snapped a shot of my newly restored/reupholstered mid-century side chair!Not too shabby! All in all, I think I spent around $25 on the project ($10 for the chair, $8 for the Restor-A-Finish, and $7 for the fabric/batting...and I have plenty of Restor-A-Finish and fabric/batting left over for other projects, so the real cost of the chair is closer to $15). Here's the Flickr gallery of it with larger photos, if you're interested.
No comments:
Post a Comment