Thursday, August 14, 2014

Cover Me!



Given as I am to flights of fancy, I often think, while eating dinner with my family at our dining room table, of the generations of family members who sat around this same table telling stories, sharing sorrows, dreaming dreams.



The dining room table and chairs were built in the 1880s, commissioned by my Great-Grandfather, a businessman of Scottish descent who wanted a substantial table befitting his life as a storekeeper and father.

Sometime in the 1950s or 60s my grandfather or aunt had the chairs recovered and now it is time to do so again.

In fact, the necessity of doing this expensive undertaking this fall was created in the last few weeks when Barry's chair began to literally fall apart out from under him.



When you have a family heirloom you feel a greater responsibility to maintain it and keep it in good working order than you would if it was just something you'd purchased yourself at a local shop.

So off we went to the local upholsterer for a quote and stack of fabric swatches almost as tall as me.  Each chair will be taken apart, re-glued and re-upholstered, hopefully to serve the next generations as well for the next 50 years before someone else has to do the same thing (I hope they will!)

The decision about fabric was torturous - mostly for Barry mind you - and I went through many iterations before placing my order yesterday.  The trick for me was that whatever I chose had to be elegant enough to be worthy of the chairs, not trendy but also not stuffy, and l had to love it, since I expect to sit in it for another 40 years or so.  (what?  you don't plan to live to be 90+, too?)

So what did I choose?

Well the two captains chairs will be covered in this indigo and ivory print called Camilla from Barrow Fabrics.



The side chairs will be covered in this sapphire blue fabric called Isaiah (also from Barrow)



The small piece of fabric on the back of the side chair will be covered in this fabric, which echoes the fabric on the captain chairs but is actually the pattern turned inside out.







The chairs will go in for the face lift in September.  We are doing 6 of the 9 chairs this fall and will do the remaining 3 next year.  It is an expensive (and unexpected) undertaking, but we are excited and think it will be lovely in the end.

The three fabrics together


The upholsterer told me that upholstery is a dying art; when he began in the business, there were 15 trades persons in the local area.  Now there are only two upholsterers in the Fredericton region.  People throw out their couches and chairs now rather than recover them.

This makes me sad, actually.  While we were visiting his shop there was the most gorgeous and ornate antique couch being redone in a fantastically gorgeous and decadent-looking white faux-leather.  I started thinking of several pieces of furniture I could get re-upholstered to raise them up into something special.

But it is an expensive undertaking and I well understand why someone couldn't do it.  Re-upholstering these dining room chairs is likely as expensive as buying a brand new dining room set.  But I have yet to see a dining room table and chair as handsome as mine, or with the providence it carries for me, so that was never an option.

How about you?  Do you have pieces upholstered?  Stay tuned for the fall for the big unveiling!

Have a great day and stay safe out there!

27 comments:

  1. The fabrics look gogeous! Can't wait to see the final product!

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  2. Upholstery is an art that isn't exactly dying but is sure expensive! If those chairs weren't family heirlooms then I would have considered selling them bc with the items I questioned upholstering it made me question proceeding. Most times the upholstery is much more expensive than buying a moderately priced sofa. I have a quandary myself bc I need to reupholster a sofa but the sofa was quite dear so I feel bad getting rid of it but upholsering it is quite a large sum so I am just using it torn and all...

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    1. Naomi - you are right re: cost. However, in real life the chairs are even more spectacular - we would never find anything we like as much I don't think. But you are right - it is the equivalent of about 4 hermes scarves to do this! Hmmm - maybe not such a bad sum...

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  3. My antiques are case goods so I have not gone down that path. My parents reupholster like mad things and I cannot believe how transformative it is. I love the fabrics you selected. Gorgeous!

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    1. I have never heard the term case goods before - what does it mean? My dad used to do his old reupholstering and he did quite a good job actually, but you sure have to know what you are doing and have a perfectionist tendency, both of which he has in spades!

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  4. I really like your choices, those fabrics work wonderfully together and the textures look really interesting.
    I am a huge fan of upholstery as renewal, and I had to do all 10 of my dining room chairs last fall. Ka-ching! I've had several pieces re-upholstered and I'm sure it's something I'll continue to do, I love antiques and to keep them going feels right somehow.
    We went shopping for furniture on Monday and of course liked nothing we saw, and it was all so 'spensive. We're planning to look for antique pieces instead, the smaller scale suits our home.

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    1. well if it's good enough for Sarah Richardson and Tommy Smythe, it's good enough for us, isn't it? I could never find a dining room table and chairs as spectacular as mine, so it feels right to renew it for the next generation!

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  5. Wendy,
    I love your fabric choices. Blue and white is so timeless and soothing. I myself have upholstered furniture, from chairs and benches to 2 sofas. It is a massive and strenuous activity. And, I am a perfectionist. I fully understand the cost, but can't get myself to pay it. Although, I no longer have the extra time it takes to upholster anything of my own. Case goods are non upholstered items, such as tables, dressers, etc.
    The reason so little furniture uis worth reupholstering today is that the frames and stuffing are not usually up to the task and their replacement cost along with the fabric and labor often comes close to or exceeds the cost of a new piece.Interestingly enough, I tried to re-upholster a wing chair a few years back. The seat cushion needed to be replaced. I was stunned at how expensive the foam was in comparison to prior years . I was told it was because of Hurricane Katrina. Apparently all of the foam factories had been in the New Orleans area. Sadly, it is also more and more difficult to find fabric.
    Gorgeous wood pieces like yours are a different story!

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    1. Thanks! What a good amount of information! I love learning new things!

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  6. This seems such a worthwhile project for chairs with a personal history. Nice colors in the fabrics.

    We "commissioned" our dining table from a local boat builder who did it as a vacation for himself-- straight lines instead of all those curves. It's a simple 8 foot rock maple Shaker-like table with tapered legs, surrounded with various antique thumb back Windsors, overlooking our beautiful harbor. I live at this table. Maybe my ancestors will, too.

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    1. Lane - I am sure they will!!! We have an antique Windsor pub chair that my grandmother picked up in England and which is, I think, 18th or 19th century. There is a small hole in one arm where the patrons used to stub out their cigars!

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  7. Your fabric choices are gorgeous! I love how they all work together and compliment each other. We have had most of our furniture recovered as it is all circa 1910-1918 arts and crafts era dark oak. We have one really fabulous upholstery shop here and they are kept quite busy with custom projects...we found their work of the highest standard and the cost well very dear BUT we have many years left with the enjoyment of restored period pieces.
    On a side note....we went to dinner at a friends home years ago and the chair my husband was sitting in collapsed under his weight so being good guests we offered to have it fixed....let's just say we could have all dined out in the most expensive restaurant in town with a magnum of champagne for what it cost! Who knew regency period chairs were so expensive to restore!

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    1. I am glad Barry is not the only one. He didn't completely fall out from underneath him, but given more time!

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  8. When the history is so well known and so personal then you've no choice, Wendy, but to bite the bullet and pay up! I'm a great sentimentalist about objects and have had chairs that are frankly plug ugly reupholstered simply because of their family connections. The last item was a wing chair that my father used to sit in. I asked the upholsterer if it was worth doing and he assured me that it was a good chair and worth the expense. Choosing the fabric, now that was hard! I applaud your decisions, it is not at all easy no matter how many samples of fabric there are to choose from. You are going to end up with something truly special. (My husband has collapsed a few chairs - I think they are trying to tell him something!)

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    1. The fabric choices were torturous - so many beautiful things to choose from!!! I also have thinking maybe men today are larger than men of the 19th century.... ;-)

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  9. Your dining room set is going to take on a renewed life with this fabric. I agree with what others have said here about modern furniture not being worth reupholstering. Friends were discussing the other day that a lot of the antique business is also suffering from lack of customers these days. We don't want the care of old pieces any more I guess. Kudos to you.

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    1. I wonder if that will turn around with the next generation, given they are more environmentally conscious and antiques are the ultimate reuse....

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  10. I think your fabric choices are wonderful Wendy - they'll look absolutely wonderful once they're redone. And how lovely to have a family piece that has been handed down and has a story to tell.
    I have things upholstered, and am currently starting to get a sofa and armchairs done for our Library - the sofa and chairs used to belong to my parents. But the last time I had two chairs reupholstered the upholsterer asked me where I had got them (from my inLaws and passed down in my husband's family since they were new) and said the only reason to reupholster them was because the shapes were not common any more, due to the cost. Otherwise, buy new. It was quite deflating. The chairs were from the early 1800's, and are solid and beautifully made. The upholsterer is run off his feet, so maybe there aren't so many of them around any more? Certainly I figure if people are reupholstering then maybe it isn't a dying art?

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    1. I think there needs to be a re-upholstery revolution! We have become such a disposable society. What I love is the idea of taking these chairs and honouring them while still making them me. I am wondering what % of upholstery work comes from designers? They always seem to do it and to great effect.

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  11. Your chairs look beautiful. I'm glad you are keeping them. I can't wait to see the finished product.

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  12. I look forward to seeing your chairs when they are finished. Lovely fabrics!

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  13. I recently reupholstered our Art Deco club suite. We have had it for 35 years and it was years old when we bought it. This is the second time I’ve had it done. I love it and its so comfy. It looks great. I went from the original plain - to tapestry floral and now stripe and plain mixed. It has three armchair and a four seater sofa. Kate A

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  14. I found a very reasonable vietnamese upholsterer online who turned it around in about two weeks and he also made 'arm caps’ to protect the arms - all piped to match the upholstery. Admittedly it still cost about the same as a new suite but I think the quality better and style is classic and will stand the test of time. Kate A

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  15. Designer fabric at discount prices. Choose from home decor, fashion, upholstery and drapery fabric for your projects at My Fabric Connection.
    faux tooled leather fabric

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Kindness is a virtue...