Slip Cover Adventures
It's been a while since I've posted anything but I have a good excuse - I've been having an adventure. Not a white water river rafting adventure or a trek across Thailand, but an adventure none the less. I have this not so attractive swivel chair in my living room. I got it for a good price from my local furniture consignment store, not wanting to invest in a new chair until my fuzzy friends were no longer ruling this roost. Here's a picture of the chair:
Kind of a weird perspective but you can see it's a dull colored plush sort of fabric. The chair itself is really comfortable and it swivels. The swivel is crucial because if the chair is turned around like you see in the picture, the ferrets climb up the chair, stand on the back and jump across the space to the table behind. From the table they can get crawl through the railing and get upstairs. Getting upstairs is one of their life goals so any time an opportunity presents itself they take full advantage. Here is how the chair usually looks:
Because the chair is used as a ladder, it is full of pulled threads. Not so attractive. I thought about reupholstering the chair but decided against it because a) nice fabric is expensive, b) the ferrets would still climb on it and wreck the new fabric, and c) I have no idea how to do it.
But - the chair was driving me crazy, dull and unattractive and getting worse by the second, kind of like your hair once you realize it's past time to get it cut. Maybe I could make a slip cover for it. I took a quick trip to my local Joann Fabrics and headed straight to the piles of "discount fabrics". I found a bolt with 8.3 yards left, actually called "outdoor" fabric in colors that I thought would work. It was very tightly woven and sort of slippery - maybe it would prove impossible for the ferrets to climb the chair! Anyways, it was $9/yard, kind of pricey to experiment with. I say "experiment" because I had never sewn a slip cover and had no idea how many yards of fabric I needed. I put the fabric back and then noticed that all of the discount fabric was 50% off . Grabbing it back, I headed to the cutting counter trying to figure out how much to buy since I had not actually measured the chair (note to self for next time). Since the remainder of the bolt was about $36 I just bought the whole thing figuring that the rest of it could be used for something....which is probably the reason I have filled up a couple of closets with fabric.
Spoiler alert: If you want actual directions to making a slip cover, stop reading now and head for the Internet.
How to begin - start with Pinterest of course where lots of kind folk had posted tutorials on making slip covers, videos, pictures, etc. Several suggested using cheap fabric like old sheets to make a pattern, playing around until you get it right and then using this to cut out the nice fabric. Probably a wise way to go but being the impatient sort I just started fitting it onto the chair, beginning with the cushion and tracing around each part with a black marker on the wrong side of the fabric. If you take this approach make sure you have a fine marker that does not bleed through and show on the right side.
Penny is a great help - crawling under the fabric I am trying to pin. You can see a part of the arm, bottom and back of the chair being pinned together wrong side out. Slick trick but hard on the brain to do it all in what seems like reverse.
Penny is lucky she didn't get pinned into the project! The first part finished was the chair cushion. It was the easiest since you could actually lay the fabric on the cushion and trace around it. I also bought white cording to make the piping around the cushion and the top of the chair. It was easy to make: cut a strip about 1.5 inches wide, fold in half with the cording in the middle (wrong sides together) and sew as close as possible to the cording. The piece(s) should be cut on the bias and stitched together into the lengths you need. This keeps the fabric from stretching out of shape when you sew it. Since my fabric had absolutely no stretch and I'm sort of lazy as I mentioned before, I cut a straight strip along the edge of the fabric. Here's the finished cushion:
The rest of the slip cover was like a big puzzle. I measured each section of the chair - arms, bottom, sides, back, traced around where I could and cut out over-sized pieces. These pieces were fit together, pinned and then sewed one seam at a time. After each seam I would put the cover back on, still inside out and make adjustments, re-pin and then sew the next seam. It was a long process and sometimes I would pin it, go over to the sewing machine to sew and couldn't figure out why I had pinned it that way. Back I would go to the chair, re-pin again, back to the sewing machine, etc. I think I pinned one of the arms where 4 pieces come together about 5 times, just couldn't wrap my brain around it.
It was easiest to sew the piping to one of the pieces and then pin them together. I could not just pin it in between the pieces because the fabric was slippery. I finished each seam because it unraveled easily and I wanted to be able to wash the cover without it falling apart.The entire slip cover project probably took about 20 hours.Here's the final product and I must say that I am really happy with it, especially since it's my first attempt.
The only bad news - it's not too slippery for the ferrets to climb. I guess I will mostly be looking at the back of the chair just like before.