Home StoreHouse added 708 new photos to the album Hari Raya Order Open now! Waterproof/Non-waterproof/Anti-Scratch.Not Ready Made cover! These are CUSTOM made to your sofa size and shape. Pls click the link on how is our waterproof fabric works! As it is Custom made, pls provide your SOFA picture for quotation. These are from JAPAN, not those china made copied cat cheapskate sofa cover that made from spandex, hot and torn easily. Our material are cotton+polyster(rubberise), so make it very expandable. money back guaranteed if not fit. Fabric samples can be view from Woodlands, pls msg for arrangement. These sofa slip covers come in just one piece and go over the entire sofa and completely cover the sofa. A product that wanted so much in Singapore household now. It will reborn your tiring look sofa into a lively new sofa. Easy and 100% confirm Fit. Thick and strong fabric. 100% machine washable, low speed, no hot water, no dryer. Eco alternative to a new sofa. 1. These stretchable elastic fabric covers can fit different shapes of sofa, which allows you to adapt to most of the sofas available on the market.
(Note: not recommended for sofas without seat gap, but in many cases will still actually fit) 2. This is a fantastic cost saving way of sprucing up and bringing back to life a old / damaged sofa. The magic sofa cover is perfect to protect your new expensive sofa. 3. These fitted slip covers are much better than alternatives such as cheap throws because they completely cover the sofa and they stay in place, also they look far more fashionable than many of the throws currently on the market. 4. Now you don't need to buy a new sofa anymore Because magic sofa cover will give you a new vibrant look to your room. 5.At the same time you can save lots of money. As it is made to measure, custom made to suit you sofa, so, the waiting time is 4-5 wk, strictly not for urgent buyers. If you not agree, pls do not place order. If you have other kind of items that need to do but cannot be found here, like ottoman, recliner chair, arm chair, etc, pls contact us. Home StoreHouse added 23 new photos to the album Hari Raya Order - Luxury Curtain Made to Order.Pls advise the measurement you need for quotation as all on Made to OrderHome StoreHouse shared their album.
Home StoreHouse added 9 new photos to the album Hari Raya Order Open now! /100000143836740/videos/1353305328017582/ As it is Custom made, pls provide your SOFA picture for quotation. Home StoreHouse added 165 new photos to the album Ikea Sofa Cover Made to Order.Ektorp/Klobo/Klippan/Lycksele/Kivik/Karlstad/Solsta/Nockeby/Poang/Soderhamn/Hagalund/Vilasund/Friheten/ETCHome StoreHouse added 47 new photos to the album Hari Raya Order - Luxury Curtain Made to Order.Pls advise the measurement you need for quotation as all on Made to OrderHome StoreHouse shared their album.Home StoreHouse added 367 new photos to the album Sofa Make Over Showcases - Made to Measure.Hari Raya order start now! Made to measure to your sofa size and shape, pls send us your sofa pic for quotation. Lead times 4 wk, pls order soon to avoid disappointment.Home StoreHouse added 81 new photos to the album Hari Raya Order - Luxury Curtain Made to Order.Pls advise the measurement you need for quotation as all on Made to OrderHome StoreHouse added 76 new photos to the album Hari Raya Curtain - mixed collection Made to Order.Home StoreHouse shared their album.
Home StoreHouse added 767 new photos to the album New items added - Foam + Cover Made to Measure.Made to Order. Foam and fabric can be viewed from Woodlands.Home StoreHouse added 155 new photos to the album Hari Raya Curtain - mixed collection Made to Order.Home StoreHouse shared their album.Home StoreHouse shared their album.Home StoreHouse added 316 new photos to the album Hari Raya Order - Luxury Curtain Made to Order.Pls advise the measurement you need for quotation as all on Made to OrderHome StoreHouse shared their album.Home StoreHouse added 316 new photos to the album Hari Raya Order - Luxury Curtain Made to Order.Pls advise the measurement you need for quotation as all on Made to OrderHome StoreHouse added 165 new photos to the album Hari Raya Curtain - mixed collection Made to Order.Home StoreHouse added 16 new photos to the album PVC table mat (cut to size). In medicine (oncology and other fields), performance status is an attempt to quantify cancer patients' general well-being and activities of daily life.
This measure is used to determine whether they can receive chemotherapy, whether dose adjustment is necessary, and as a measure for the required intensity of palliative care. It is also used in oncological randomized controlled trials as a measure of quality of life. There are various scoring systems. The most generally used are the Karnofsky score and the Zubrod score, the latter being used in publications by the WHO. For children, the Lansky score is used. Another common system is the Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) system. Parallel scoring systems include the Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF) score, which has been incorporated as the fifth axis of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM) of psychiatry. The Karnofsky score runs from 100 to 0, where 100 is "perfect" health and 0 is death. Practitioners occasionally assign performance scores in between standard intervals of 10. This scoring system is named after Dr. David A. Karnofsky, who described the scale with Dr. Walter H. Abelmann, Dr. Lloyd F. Craver, and Dr. Joseph H. Burchenal in 1948.
[1] The primary purpose of its development was to allow physicians to evaluate a patient's ability to survive chemotherapy for cancer. The Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) score (published by Oken et al. in 1982), also called the WHO or Zubrod score (after C. Gordon Zubrod), runs from 0 to 5, with 0 denoting perfect health and 5 death:[2] Its advantage over the Karnofsky scale lies in its simplicity. Children, who might have more trouble expressing their experienced quality of life, require a somewhat more observational scoring system suggested and validated by Lansky et al. in 1987:[3] A translation between the Zubrod and Karnofsky scales that works especially well for healthy patients has been validated in a large sample of lung cancer patients:[4]I wrote about the floor model chair that I picked up for half-off yesterday. It had a 2″ tear along the top (not along a seam), and I asked if it seemed like something that can be fixed. I called Anthropologie to see if they could offer a better discount (no), but they did say that I could still return the chair even after attempting to fix it, so I figured I had nothing to lose by trying.
Many of you recommended keeping the orange chair that we already own, and having it reupholstered for a new look. I like the shape of the new chair more though, I love the fabric, and if I sell the orange chair I can essentially swap chairs at no cost. Then if I decided to reupholster the new chair at some point, I’m not out any more money than I would be had I reupholstered the orange one. [ 1, 2, 3 ] I went to the fabric store for mending supplies and came home with an embroidery hoop and some fabric to practice on, various liquid stitch adhesives, Fray Check, curved needles, iron-on patches, and several types of thread and embroidery floss. I stretched my scrap fabric on the hoop and jabbed at it with scissors to recreate the upholstery tear. I frayed the edges too for good measure. Then I got to work trying out various methods, keeping the fabric stretched tight on the hoop to simulate the conditions of the fabric stretched tight across the chair back. Here are the methods that I (a novice) used.
First, I applied Fray Check, as recommended by this upholstery darning tutorial. Then I used a heavy-weight thread that matched the fabric, and started with a looped stitch. I’ll let my play-by-play Twitter updates tell the story here. August 3, 2011 8:35 pm via TweetDeckReplyFavorite@makingitlovely August 3, 2011 8:46 pm via TweetDeckReplyFavorite@makingitlovely August 3, 2011 8:58 pm via TweetDeckReplyFavorite@makingitlovely OK, I was trying to be cute with that last bit. The Frankenstein stitching was somewhat charming, but not enough to actually use it on the chair. And I did figure it out toward the end, but it still wasn’t a good enough fix and I was worried that the extra tension would eventually rip the fabric further. I thought that I could slip a little fabric under the tear and then glue in back together. I had actually called a local upholsterer for advice and this was the technique that they recommended, so I tried it. The worst of it was a product I found (that sounded promising!) called Tear Mender.
It was a rubber-cement like adhesive that smelled awful and gummed up my fabric. I think it could be great for thicker fabric or leather, but it was terrible for my linen. I tried a few other liquid stitch products, but none with good results. There were two options for patching. One: I could cut out a matching portion of fabric from my chair’s armrest covers, glue it over the tear or iron it on with fusible mending tape, apply Fray Check to the ends, then stitch around the patch to secure. Or option two: slap an iron-on patch over the rip. To my surprise, the easier option worked! The patch fuses completely to the fabric, bonding to the ripped portion and preventing the tear from getting worse. And even better, the edges of the mending patch won’t fray so there’s no need to stitch around the edge (which calls more attention to the repair). It’s not invisible (and I never expected that it would be), but it looks like it’s just part of the chair’s busy pattern. And as I had mentioned, the tear takes away some of the chair’s preciousness, which isn’t such a bad thing.