upholstery | Retro Active Lifestyle https://retroactivelifestyle.com/tag/upholstery/ Do Less. Live More. Sun, 19 Nov 2023 18:14:37 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://i0.wp.com/retroactivelifestyle.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/cropped-Retro-Active-Lifestyle-Icon.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 upholstery | Retro Active Lifestyle https://retroactivelifestyle.com/tag/upholstery/ 32 32 181518531 Retro Dining Chairs – Like New In 6 Easy Steps https://retroactivelifestyle.com/retro-dining-chairs/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=retro-dining-chairs Wed, 14 Jun 2023 15:00:00 +0000 http://retroactivelifestyle.com/?p=266 You can recover your old retro dining chairs yourself. It's easy to do and it will save you money! Follow this tutorial to learn how.

The post Retro Dining Chairs – Like New In 6 Easy Steps appeared first on Retro Active Lifestyle.

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We made a video of this whole process in case you learn better by watching than reading.

These retro dining chairs sure saw some action in the 15 years since we bought them. No one could argue that we didn’t get our money’s worth from them. Still, we weren’t ready to part with them just yet, so we decided to give them a new life. It wasn’t as difficult as I feared it might be, and the results are stunning.

This isn’t really a beginner sort of upholstery project, though, so if you’ve never sewed before, you may want to start with a more straightforward project before diving into this style of retro dining chairs.

How To Recover Retro Dining Chairs

  1. Dismantle Your Retro Dining Chairs

    Start by removing the cushions from the frame. There are four screws in the back and 4 in the seat on these chairs, but your chairs may be different.
    Remove the eight screws holding the cushions to the frame.
    8 screws in the palm of my hand

    You will need the screws later, so put them someplace safe.
    8 screws in magnetic dish
    Put the screws someplace where they won’t get lost.

    Next, remove all of the staples holding the vinyl to the base. It’s tedious but necessary. A screwdriver and pliers are all you need to get out all the staples.
    woman removing staples from red vinyl chair backRemove staples with a flat screwdriver and pliers.

  2. Separate Your Old Retro Dining Chair Vinyl Pieces

    Separate the vinyl pieces to use them as templates for the new vinyl. Work your way around the piece cutting the thread with scissors or a seam ripper. But be careful because vinyl is thick, and so is the upholstery thread used to stitch it together. Bonnie broke all of her seam rippers taking apart these chairs, so be careful.
    woman using a seam riper to separate two pieces of red vinylCut the thread along each seam, with scissors or a seam ripper.

    You’ll reuse the welting, so set it aside for now.
    seat back vinyl panel inside outSave this welting cord to reuse

  3. Make Templates For Your New Vinyl Pieces

    Start by laying each piece out on butcher paper and trace around the outside.

    Make notes about the size, orientation, and cuts because things can get confusing when we transfer our templates to the new vinyl later. When tracing the old pieces, make the template slightly bigger than the material to allow for movement in the vinyl after the chair is reassembled. 
    woman tracing around a piece of vinyl on paperTrace around each of your vinyl pieces onto a piece of paper.

    The old boxing and welting material is too deformed to trace accurately, so use it only as a guideline.
    crumpled old welting from a retro dining chairThe old welting and boxing material is too deformed to trace accurately.

    You can use them to get the length you need and the approximate width, but don’t try to trace them onto the paper.
    vinyl seat boxing on butcher paper on pool tableUse the old boxing and welting as a guideline for the length and width only. Don’t try to trace it.

  4. Cut Out Your Retro Dining Chair Templates.

    woman cutting out paper template
    Now you can lay out your patterns. Roll out the new vinyl and trace your templates with a charcoal pencil.

    Alternatively, you can trace the old vinyl pieces directly. When you finish tracing your templates cut out your new vinyl pieces.
    woman tracing paper template onto new vinylTrace your paper template onto your new vinyl.

  5. Sewing The Front Seat Back Panel

    Staple the foam to the front seatback panel. This will hold it in place as you pass the panel through the machine.
    woman stapling foam cushion to vinylStaple the foam insert to the vinyl.

    Follow along the lines in the foam.
    sewing along the lines in the foamSew along the lines in the foam.

    This will create straight lines down the front of the panel, which is part of the style and charm of retro dining chairs, so it’s essential to get this part right. The vertical stitching will keep the material tight to the chair’s back. Without it, there would be a gap between the foam and the vinyl, and it would puff out.
    stitching lines in vinyl seat backFollow the lines in the foam to create these lines in the seat back.

    Repeat the process for all of the stitching lines. Now remove the staples. Next, sew the welting. Start by wrapping the cord with the vinyl and pinning it with a couple of pins towards the end.
    woman inserting pin in vinyl weltingInsert a pin into the vinyl welting and seat panel to hold it together while sewing together.

    You’re sewing everything inside out, so lay your pieces out accordingly. When you attach the back panel, the welting will be folded over, so pin it with the open side facing out.
    vinyl seat back panel inside outLayout and pin your panels inside out.

    Be careful as you sew the welting to the front panel because you don’t want to sew the edge of the foam to the vinyl. Pin it only with a couple of pins at this point because the welting must stretch as you go around the corners.

    Go slow and make sure everything stays lined up and the piping stays inside.
    sewing welting to seat back panelSew the welting to the seatback panel.

  6. Sewing The Back Seat Back Panel

    Pin the back panel at the bottom two corners and the center of the top seam. As you sew around the edge, these pins keep the back panel from moving off-center. The hard part here is staying straight as you move down the seam. The welting makes a little ridge that creates a balancing act. If you fall off the edge, the seam won’t be straight. It’s ok, though, because all of this stitching is hidden when your retro dining chairs are finished.

    Now go around the whole thing again, following the welting to tighten your seam. Make minor cuts in the vinyl along the curved portions without cutting into the stitching. This makes the material more flexible when it’s turned right side out. Set this vinyl aside for now.

  7. Sewing The Seat

    sewing boxing to vinyl seat panelSew boxing to seat panel.

    Because you can’t hide the box seam, you want to make it as even as possible at the back of the panel. Then go all the way around and attach the ends in the middle. Sometimes the way you cut out the material causes the piece to stretch more to one side than the other, and so you end up with more welting material at one end than the other, so make sure the cord does not come all the way to the end of the vinyl. And just like before, we pin the welting with the opening facing out.

    Overlap the two ends of the welting, and start the locking stitch about an inch and a half from the end. Line up the edges of the pieces and then move along the edge of the cord. Move slowly, keeping everything lined up edge to edge as you go. Before you get to the end, cut away the excess cord.
    scissors cutting excess welting cordCut the excess welting cord before you finish sewing.

    Fold one end of the welting into itself and lay the other end on top. Then staple the seam to hold it together while you sew it.
    folding and tucking weltingFold the ends of the welting and overlap the two ends onto each other.

    Don’t stitch the end of the boxing. Fold it over as you did with the welting. Now fold over one end of the boxing and staple it. Lay the other end over the folded end and pin it. Finish the seam, remove the pin, and go around the whole thing again to tighten the seam.
    stapling vinyl to hold in place temporarilyFold the end of the seat boxing over and staple it.

  8. Covering The Cushions

    scissors making relief cuts in vinylUse scissors to make cuts in the corners.
    showing the result of the relief cutsThe cuts will make the vinyl easier to bend when you turn it right side out.

    Working in small sections, staple the vinyl to the seat bottom of your retro dining chair. Pull the material tight from the other side and staple it. Working your way around the whole seat, pull and staple until there is no slack left.
    stapling vinyl to seat baseFold the seat panel over the base, pulling it tight and stapling it in place.

    Then cut out the excess material and tack down the loose bits.
    scissors cutting excess vinyl of seat bottomCut out the excess material.

    Same idea with the seatback. Pull the back panel tight and staple it down.
    stapling foam to seat backStaple the vinyl to the bottom of the seat back.

    Then cut out the excess material from the back panel, fold over the front panel, and staple it over the edge of the back panel.  
    scissors cutting excess vinyl off seat backCut out the excess material.

  9. Clean the Chair Frames


    You could re-chrome the chair frames if you wanted to make them brand new again. But you will have to outsource if you don’t have the equipment required. Or, you can just clean the rust off of them. Most of the rust is on the surface anyway, and so it is easily removed.

    I used Bar Keepers Friend and a wet sponge to scrub the rust off of our retro dining chairs.Cleaning metal with a sponge Gently scrub chair frames with Bar Keepers Friend.
    rinsing metal retro dining chair frame with garden houseRinse off the Bar Keepers friend.

    After a rinse, I used Never Dull to remove rust and polish the chrome. Then I wiped the whole thing down with a clean towel. This process removes most of the rust, but it doesn’t get all. You could remove it all if you wanted to spend the time, but this will all be covered anyway.

    Be careful with the Bar Keepers Friend. It is abrasive and it can remove the chrome plating.
    man squatting down with a can of Never DullWipe the whole frame down with Never Dull.

  10. Put Your Retro Dining Chairs Back Together


    The seat is straightforward. It just has the four screws, but the back is a little more complicated though, but I have a trick to find the screw holes through the vinyl. To find the indentations from the chair cushion, feel along them until you find the four puckered screw holes.

    So now that you’ve found the first screw hole, You can use an awl or an ice pick to poke a hole in the vinyl over the screw hole. Repeat this process on one hole on the opposite side. Now start the first screw but don’t tighten it down all the way.

    Insert the second screw and tighten it down. Move back to the first screw and tighten it down all the way.

    Now use the icepick to easily start the other two holes and install the two screws.
    man with fingers on vinyl chair backFeel the indentations in the foam to find the old screw holes.

    .

That’s it. Your retro dining chairs are finished and ready for use! If you have any questions about any part of this process, please leave them in the comments, and we’ll do our best to answer them. You can also watch this whole process in the video below.

And now that you have beautiful brand-new retro dining chairs, be sure to check out our post about how to clean your vinyl chairs to keep them looking beautiful.

The post Retro Dining Chairs – Like New In 6 Easy Steps appeared first on Retro Active Lifestyle.

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