When I was getting ready for Lucketts, a lot of my friends asked me which pieces were my favorite projects. So, I thought I'd do a few posts about my favorites.
I bought this rocking chair at the last minute, about a week before the market. It had a cane back and cane bottom. The cane bottom looked new, but the back looked terrible. I haven't yet learned how to weave cane furniture, so I decided to reupholster this chair. And I was in such a rush to finish projects that I forgot to take a before picture. Bummer.
Using spray primer, I primed it and painted it with Annie Sloan Chalk Paint in Provence. I mostly primed it because I didn't know what color I wanted to paint it, but I'm glad I did because I didn't want any of the black paint to show through anyway. After the paint dried, I went over it with a coat of wax.
I was actually planning to put different fabric on it, but at the last second I realized how gorgeous the retro flowered fabric looked with the blue, so I decided to use that instead. Once I had upholstered the front and back, I had to figure out what kind of trim to use. I wasn't really wanting to sew double-welt cord, so I looked around my house to see what I had. That's when I saw my big bag of cord that I would ordinarily use to sew double weight cord. The oatmeal color looked perfect against the fabric, so I doubled it up and attached it.
I am so in love with this color fabric combo to the point where I might actually do our unfinished dining chairs in this style. I sold it to a lady who has two little boys and was decorating a nursery for her little girl on the way. I love that this chair will look adorable in a nursery but be able to grow with the little girl too.
So that's my favorite. I'll be back later this week with more info.
P.S. Tonight I'm going to see a lecture by Jonathan Adler at the Corcoran with some blogger friends and I'm so pumped. Anyone else in DC going?
Linked to: Primitive and Proper, The Shabby Creek Cottage, Domestically Speaking, Miss Mustard Seed, Redoux, Shabby Nest, Making Lemonade
Showing posts with label chairs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label chairs. Show all posts
Tuesday, May 22, 2012
Thursday, March 1, 2012
The Un-Caned Chair
A while back I acquired this chair at a thrift store. I liked the lines of it and knew it could look really cool with new upholstery, so I took it home and let it sit in my dining room all winter. At this point, that shouldn’t be a surprise to you.
I have to admit that I twinge a bit when I watch people
remove cane from furniture and replace it with upholstery. It seems like they
do it with such enthusiasm, like cane is this terrible trend in furniture that
we need to remove from antiques across the country. I think part of the reason
for the slow extinction of cane furniture is that, at least most of the time,
the cane is damaged, and few people know how to replace it. I realize that this
is kind of an unreasonable rant about cane furniture, but humor me for a
minute. My grandpa knew how to weave cane furniture and often repaired chairs
for friends. My grandparents’ house was full of cane chairs, and I associate
that craft strongly with my interest in refinishing furniture. So to remove
cane from a piece almost seems sacrilegious to me.
But, I am a heathen and so I replaced the cane on this point
chair with upholstery. *GASP*. I know, I feel guilty, but hear me out. There
are two ways to apply cane to furniture. One is by weaving the cane yourself
through holes in the seat, and the other is by using pre-woven cane that you
shove into a crevice. Based on the technique used on the chair, the replacement
technique will be different. Well, my grandpa was really good at the actual
cane weaving, but I don’t remember seeing a ton of furniture in their house
that used the newer technique, so I didn’t feel as bad replacing the cane with
upholstery. Plus, getting the cane out of the crevice was going to take
forever, this chair didn’t seem worth the effort.
To makeover this chair, I first removed the seat by
unscrewing it from underneath the chair. Then I removed the cane by running my
flathead screwdriver through the holes and ripping the cane close to the frame.
Once I had removed the cane piece, I took pliers and removed as much of the
cane left over as I could. I knew it didn’t have to be perfect because fabric
wouald be over it.
Once the primer was dry, I brushed on two coats of Glidden
flat paint in Picket by Martha Stewart. While the paint was drying, I took
apart the old seat cushion and found a gross piece of foam completely falling
apart. Yuck. I also found a ton of staples in the wood seat, which I used my
screwdriver and pliers to remove. Luckily the Christmas Attic uses lots of
staples to hang things in their store, so I had plenty of experience removing
staples. It took quite a bit of work to get the wood seat clean, but I got it
done.
At this point it was late on Sunday night, so I let the
paint dry overnight and hung out with the boy for a while.
The next morning I used some 80 grit sandpaper to distress
the edges of the chair. I used a cloth to dust off the chair and then brushed a
coat of Minwax Polycrylic over the entire chair. I let the chair dry while I
was at work and got back to it when I came home in the evening.
Then came the upholstery. This was my first try at
upholstering something with a picture back, so it took longer than I had hoped,
but that always seems to be the case when I’m learning a new technique. Again,
I used instructions I found on Design*Sponge to upholster the back, except I
only used layers of Dacron instead of foam because the foam was just too poufy
for this chair. I used my parents’ electric stapler to attach all the layers.
It sucked. No matter how hard I tried to keep the staple gun straight, the
staple went in sideways. I finished off half a box of staples and had to go to
the store to get more. And after I thought I was finished, I realized that
somehow the pattern wasn’t quite straight, so I had to fix it a little the next
day. So a recommendation for you: If this if your first try, I recommend using
a floral or something more abstract that is forgiving in terms of pattern
placement.
Upholstering the seat was much easier. Notice that this seat
has a hole in the base. I didn’t really want to cut a new piece of wood, so I
used another set of instructions I found on Design Sponge to attach some new
furniture webbing to the wood base. Then I added a thick piece of foam and then
covered the foam and seat in Dacron, stapling on the underside of the seat. I
made sure not to obscure any of the holes for the screws to attach the seat
back to the frame.
Next I cut a piece of fabric for the seat, made sure I lined
it up centered, and stapled it in place. I improvised a bit with the back,
which had room cut out for the back of the chair.
Finally it was time to sew my cording. I used this tutorial
from Centsational Girl to make my double welt cord for the back of the chair.
Double welt cord is great because it hides all the imperfections of the
staples. Sewing the cord was easy, but a bit time consuming. I also didn’t have
a zipper foot, so the cord is a little wider than normal. That was fine by me. Once
I had finished the double welt cord, I attached it to the chair with a hot glue
gun. Then I sewed a single welt cord and attached it to the bottom of the chair
with a glue gun. I screwed the seat back onto the frame, and my masterpiece was
done.
Voila! It reminds me of something from Ballard Designs. I might keep it, I might sell it, I might save it for the Lucketts Spring Market. We shall see.
Linked to: Savvy Southern Style, Mom 4 Real, My Repurposed Life, Someday Crafts, The Shabby Creek Cottage, Redoux, The Shabby Nest, Making Lemonade, Simple Home Life, Domestically Speaking, Somewhat Simple, aka Design, 504 Main, Chic on a Shoestring, The 36th Avenue, Beyond the Picket Fence, Southern Lovely, At the Picket Fence, Thrifty Decorating, Remodelaholic, Miss Mustard Seed
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