Showing posts with label DIY dining room chairs. Show all posts

How to Reupholster Stanley Dining Chairs Part 2

Friday, April 8, 2016

In part one of this tutorial I showed you how to take a chair apart and prep it for reupholstering. Today I'm going to show you how to put it back together. 

The scoop on how I painted the table is here

I am trying to blog more purposefully lately and I keep asking myself what I'm hoping you get from this blog post. I hope that you'll come away feeling like having a nice room, with furniture that you love, is an achievable goal even on a small budget. Whether it's reupholstering chairs, painting a table, or creating a small still life, I want you to feel like you can do it! Without setting foot in Pottery Barn (unless you want to).

Of course there is nothing wrong with new furniture, but I absolutely love up-cycling old things. I love having a space that no one else has and putting my own creative stamp on my home. There is a tremendous satisfaction to be had from doing something yourself, from feathering your own nest. Plus, when it's time to get spendy I'd way rather do it on a fantastic piece of art than on a chair. 

So, if you're still with me, let's get to upholstering!

I began with the seat. I cut out the top part of the seat, inside the piping, and used this piece as a pattern for my new cover.
Pin it to the fabric and cut around it leaving about a half inch for a seam allowance.
There are a lot of chairs where you can just cut a large piece of fabric, wrap the seat and staple it to the bottom. My chairs are more structured. From here I needed to cut a six inch wide strip of fabric the length of the perimeter of the seat and sew it on. I'm calling it the "seat edge piece." Here is a diagram to help explain what I mean.
Pin the seat edge piece to the seat with a piece of piping sandwiched between them. Sew the ends of the seat edge piece together first, then sew the seat edge piece all the way around the edge of the seat piece.
When that is done you put the piece back over the wood piece with the cushion on it and staple it into place.


As you staple work back and forth stapling on opposite sides as you work around the piece. Only pull your fabric taut enough to be smooth, if you get too energetic and pull the fabric really tight the staples will rip through the fabric. You want the fabric to have enough give that when someone sits on it the fabric doesn't rip through the staples. Which we hates.
After the seat cover is stapled on, lay piping all around the bottom edge and staple that on.
This next photo shows how to hide the ends of the piping. I like this seam to be at the "back" of the seat.
 Now trim all the stray threads and screw the seat back onto the chair frame. 

It's time get a diet coke and tackle the back.

Here is your bare back.
Lay a piece of fabric over it and trim to roughly the size of the opening.
Begin stapling it to the frame working back and forth stapling opposite sides as you pull the fabric just tight enough to be smooth but not so tight that the staples rip through the fabric.
For my chair these staples needed to be on the inside of the channel. Pay attention to how the original fabric was attached on your chair and use that as your guide.
Trim the excess fabric close to the staples leaving about 1/4 inch all the way around.
Lay the foam padding on top.
And lay a piece of fabric trimmed to size over it.
Begin stapling the fabric to the chair frame. For my chair this is where I needed my long nose staple gun because I needed to get the fabric pushed into the channel and stapled there.
 The same as before, keep the fabric smooth, but not too tight or the staples will rip right through the fabric. Work around the chair doing opposite sides, so one staple at the top, then one at the bottom-one on the left side, then one on the right. Until you're done. Use lots of staples because if anyone ever tries to take this thing apart you want them to have just as many staples to remove as you did!
Cut off the excess fabric.
Now it's time to hot glue piping all around the edge to cover the staples and make it pretty!

For this you need to trim the piping as close as you can to the stitching.
And start gluing it around with the high temperature hot glue. My fingers got burned a bunch doing this. I don't know what to tell you except be better than me.
I tried to get a close up photo of how I hide the ends by tucking them straight into the seam. I do it at the bottom middle of the chair back so all the seams are "lined up" with the ones on the chair seat.

Now remember that before and after?
So satisfying! Now just trim all your stray threads and be amazed with yourself!

And as always, I would be thrilled to answer any questions you have about this project.


How to Reupholster a Stanley Dining Chair Part 1

Monday, April 4, 2016

How to reupholster a Dining Chair with Piping

All the way back in 2014 I stumbled on eight Stanley dining chairs for sale on Craigslist for $100. I didn't even mess with any bargaining, I just swooped them up! EIGHT chairs for $100! Woooo-Whooo!

And then they sat in my garage.

And sat some more.

Because I was working on other projects, sure, but also because I was scared to get started. I had no idea how to reupholster those bad boys and I was worried about messing them up. Eventually I gave my current hoop back wooden dining chairs to Katie in an effort to force myself to get on with it already. But instead I just brought six of the eight gold velvet chairs up to the dining room and pretended that was an okay decorating choice.

The good news is a year an a half later I finally finished all the chairs, amen! And I'm ready to share the journey with you, although I suggest you act like a sane person and start with one chair instead of eight. One chair would be like, a perfect project, instead of a go big or go home extravaganza.
The first thing to do is to deconstruct the chairs. 

Oh wait! The first thing is to gather your supplies. 

You need fabric, about two yards per chair. I couldn't decide between a clean linen, Restoration Hardware type look, and a patterned upholstery fabric for a really custom look. I decided to do the six side chairs in an oatmeal colored linen (actually cut from curtain panels that I found at a going out of business sale at my favorite discount fabric store) and the two armchairs with an ikat floral pattern that I found at the same store. You will also need a butt load of piping. I will do video post soon of how to make your own piping, promise.

You also need some tools and while you might be able to do it with what you already have, I ended up needing to invest in a couple specialty items that made it a lot easier.
1. A staple remover tool that you can get at any hardware store.

2. A long nose upholstery staple gun. I ordered mine from Amazon here. We already had a staple gun that works with our air compressor, but needed the long nose to fit in the channel that you can see in this photo.
3. Upholstery staple remover. It's nice because it rocks back and forth for finessing out tough staples, and the pointing nose can get down in the channel too. Another Amazon buy from here

4. Pliers for yanking out staples that won't come all the way out with the removers, and for grabbing at stubborn fabric that is glued on.

5. Fabric scissors

6. High temp hot glue sticks 

7. Staples that fit your special snowflake of a staple gun. Link, because I care.

8. A pen for labeling the different chair pieces as you take them apart.

9. A high temperature hot glue gun. I got mine at Ace Hardware.

Okay! Let's do this thing!

Begin by flipping over a chair and unscrewing the seat. Keep the screws together in a safe place. It should pop right off and you'll have just the seat cushion to work with. You'll see that the seat is made up of three parts, the outer fabric-which is wrapped around and stapled to-, the foam cushion, and the wooden base. Use a screw driver or staple remover to remove the fabric.

You will want to take one of the fabric covers off in tact so you can use it as a pattern for your new seat covers. After that you can cut and rip the rest of them off like a beast!

As you take chairs apart number all of the pieces so you can put the same chair pieces back together. So this is chair number four. I wrote 4 on the foam cushion, 4 on the wooden piece you can see beneath the cushion and 4 on the underside of the chair itself. When I took apart the back rest I also labeled the piece of foam from it with a 4. Even though all the pieces from each chair are essentially the same, I found they go back together more easily if you keep the same pieces together. Even with all my labeling I goofed once and put the wrong wood piece back with the wrong chair frame and the screw holes wouldn't line up properly. Doh!
After you take apart the seat, do the back. It's kind of scary the first time, but you have to use your scissors to poke a hole in the middle of the chair back. Avoid damaging the foam cushion as much as possible and cut through the fabric to the edge of the chair. You are simply going to cut and pull at the fabric until it all comes off. You'll see that the piping (sometimes called welting) is just glued over the staples used to attach the fabric to the wood frame. Use a slow and steady pressure as you pull; the more staples and glue that come off with the fabric the happier you will be because you won't have to remove them later. 
Once the fabric is all off you can gently remove the foam backing. You may have to wiggle it free from some staples. Remember to label it!

Now use your scissors, staple remover and muscles to pull off the back piece of fabric. 

Wowee! You've made a nekkid chair!
I wish everything was as fun as making a nekkid chair but unfortunately you have come to the less fun part. It is taking out staples. For this you will use both your staple removers, pliers, and swear words. Okay, I don't usually swear but I made a lot of unhappy growling sounds. You do whatever you need to do. I'm not here to judge, that is fo sho!
I don't think it is possible to get all the old staples out without going crazy. What you are working for here is less staples than when you started. You don't want the old staples making lumpy weirdness under your new beautiful fabric. And you also need some room to put your NEW staples. So just, you know, take out as many staples as you can before you need a valium. 

Be careful as you rock the tools against the wood. My chairs are pretty old and you can see in this picture how I chipped the upper right hand corner trying to pull out a staple. All is not lost if you do get a chip, you can hide it with a little bit of wood stain when you're done.

And that concludes part one-taking apart your chair. On Friday I hope to cover the steps for putting it back together. (Link to Part 2 of this tutorial is here)

Happy DIY friends!

 

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