cheap 6 dining chairs

cheap 6 dining chairs

cheap 4 seater table and chairs

Cheap 6 Dining Chairs

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How to Reupholster Dining Room Chairs imageAlthough dining room chairs may not be used every single day, even the most durable can wear down and start to look dingy. Luckily, reupholstering a dining room chair can be a very easy job, even for someone...Read More about How to Reupholster Dining Room ChairsYour Guide to Buying Modern Dining Room Chairs imageDining chairs tend to be the glue which holds together dinner parties and nightly family dinners. Modern dining room chairs come in a wide variety of options. Regardless of the type of design style a consumer...Read More about Your Guide to Buying Modern Dining Room ChairsHuntington Chocolate Bonded Leather Button Tufted Dining Chair (Set of 2) Marjorie Beige Linen Button Tufted Dining Chair (Set of 2) Huntington Beige Linen Button Tufted Dining Chair (Set of 2) Madison Sand Beige Dining Chair (Set of 2) Sawyer Antique Black Wood Napoleon-Back Dining Chair (Set fo 2) Sawyer Oak Wood X-Back Dining Chair (Set fo 2)




Romero Cream Linen Parsons Dining Chair Romero Espresso Linen Parsons Dining Chair Easton Brown Bonded Leather Breakfast Nook Hyde Black Wood Dining Chair (Set of 2) Aldridge Antique Walnut Wood Dining Bench Jacques Natural Linen Dining Chair (Set of 2) Pascal Black Plastic Arm Chair (Set of 2) Andrew Antique Grey Dining Chair (Set of 2) Jacques Natural Linen Dining Chair Acadian 9-Piece Tanners Brown Dining Set Scarlett Natural Textured Polyester Dining Chair (Set of 2) Becca Natural Linen Tufted Dining Chair (Set of 2) Unfinished Wood Double X Back Dining Chair (Set of 2) Edmund Smoke Grey Wood Dining Bench Cosmopolitan 7-Piece Natural Dining SetWelcome back to Upholstery Basics, where we’ll be rolling up our sleeves and completing our first project together: a wrap-around seat. Of all seating, dining room chairs get the brunt of the abuse — a little vino here, red sauce there. If you’ve been glaring at those chairs and wondering how to give them that much-needed facelift, read on, and you’ll be transforming those eyesores into jaw-droppers in no time.




Read the full post on reupholstering dining chairs after the jump! Don’t forget to check out Upholstery Basics: Tool Time to learn more about the tools we’re using today. 1. Remove the seat from your chair frame by unscrewing the screws on the underside. If your seat drops into the frame, like mine, you may be able to pop it out without unscrewing it. Make sure to mark the orientation of the seat before removing. It may seem obvious, but it is imperative that we know which side is the front when we attach the fabric later. 2. Strip all of the old fabric, padding, staples and tacks off of the seat using your pliers and staple remover. Once you’re finished, you should be left with a wooden board. This is a good point to mark any screw holes, so you can avoid them as you attach new padding and fabric. 3. Flip the board upside down on top of the foam and trace the outside edge with a permanent marker. 4. Use the carving knife to cut out the shape. Don’t worry if the edges get a little ragged looking.




Just do your best to keep the blade straight up and down and not angled to one side or the other. 5. To create a slight domed shape to the seat, place a layer of cotton batting about an inch inside the edges of the board. Add extra layers if you’d like the crown of the seat to be more exaggerated. Just remember to make each additional layer of cotton slightly smaller than the one that precedes it. 6. Attach the foam to the board by stapling through the side of the foam and down into the wood. It’s best to work in opposites as you staple, so start with the back side and then move to the front. Then staple from the right to left side. Be careful not to push the foam back as you staple. We want the hard wooden edge to be padded, so it won’t show through the fabric. 7. Dacron will smooth out all of the imperfections and be the final layer of padding before the fabric. Once the foam is secured all the way around, tightly wrap Dacron around the edge and staple to the bottom of the board.




8. Trim off the excess Dacron gathered at the corners and around the bottom. 9. Now it’s time for the fabric! If you’re working with a pattern, decide where you’d like it placed on the seat. The rule of thumb is to place the top of the pattern at the back of the seat and the bottom of the pattern at the front of the seat. 10. To get started, staple the fabric at the back of the seat, but only put the staples in halfway by lifting one side of the staple gun up at an angle. These are called sub-staples and will allow you to pull them out very easily should you need to make adjustments. Once you’ve stapled the back, move on to the front. Then sub-staple the right and left sides. 11. Make a pleat in every corner by pulling the fabric from the sides around to the front and back. Fold under enough of the excess fabric to make the edges of the folds flush with the corners. Feel free to cut out bulky excess if you’re having trouble getting it all folded under the pleats, and use your regulator to get the fabric neatly tucked in.




12. Once you’re happy with where your fabric is placed, take out your sub-staples a few inches at a time and replace them with permanent staples that go in all the way. These will need to be closer together to make sure all the fabric is held down tightly. Keep a close eye on the edge as you go. The more consistent you are with the tightness of your pull, the smoother the fabric will look. Another tip: Pull with your palm instead of your fingertips to avoid puckers and dimples. 13. It’s looking like a finished seat now! After you’ve cut off the excess fabric, permanently staple the dustcover to the front side of the seat. 14. Then add a strip of cardboard tack on top for reinforcement. 15. Fold the dustcover over the tack strip toward the back of the seat. This is called a blind tack. Fold under the raw edge and staple to the back of the seat. Once you have the back secured, fold under the sides and staple. 16. If you have a seat that screws onto your chair frame, clear any holes of padding, fabric or dustcover and attach it to the chair.

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