After last week's upcycled patio chairs, I was really eager for more. Except I didn't have anything to re-do. Our adventure to Hastings was great fun, but I did not find the captain's chair I have been longing for. Well, technically I did, but someone else had already upcycled it by painting it orange, throwing a black/orange Halloween fabric on the chair pad and tried to sell it to me for $54. Nope.
Louis was bound and determined to help me find this chair (I love my husband). A captain's chair is what you would commonly see at the head of a dining room table--a basic chair, but with arms. I also required that mine have some kind of chair pad I could reupholster. Given that for every set of dining room chairs out there, only one was a captain's, I realized my odds. And struck out at our tried and true antique stores in the Mall of St. Paul.
Until this past Thursday. Our colleague, Fawn, was having a garage sale. She's the only person I know to hold a pre-sale with cocktails, so we were in. And lo and behold, among a dining room set was a captain's chair! Victory! I convinced her to split it up from it's sibling chairs and couldn't wait to get it home.
Still, it doesn't match. Okay, for you painting wood naysayers, look at that--natural wood is fine for the dining room, but the trim is already painted white upstairs!
Something had to be done about this.
I still had to recover the chair pad. Surprise! Here's what I found when I took the old fabric off (which I have to admit, I really liked, but it was worn and dirty): old foam covering a duct-taped chair. I'm wondering if the tan vinyl were the original coverings and more recently the green fabric and foam had been added. Anyhow, I replaced it with new blue paisley fabric and a new piece of foam, thanks to my trusty staple gun. :)
And here it is--the big reveal! C'mon, doesn't that white just make the blue paisley cover pop? And it fits in so nicely with the already-painted trim (AND those lovely new bedroom curtains I made!).
In case you need a side-by-side review: the debate of painting wood versus not painting wood will rage on. You know where I stand.