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Parker Project - Upholstery
Hi all,
Great forum.
Picked up a bargain Parker dining setting (table and 6 chairs) and from reading a bunch of threads on here i am confident i can give the wood work a new lease on life. (steel wool/metho/feast & watson danish oil)
my question relates to replacing the horrible vinyl 'upholstery'. We are planning to reseat in leather and not sure how the original would have looked. The current seats are poorly covered with obvious pleats and creases.
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Anyone know how they were covered originally?
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Welcome and some information that may be of use
Welcome to the forums. It is a friendly and helpful place. I am attaching some photos of the original upholstery on some similar mid-century modern chairs, though these are a set of 6 roadside rescue chairs made by CRO in Sydney. The Parker chairs may have been a cut above the CRO but, from memory, they were very similarly upholstered in a fairly thin vinyl, which limited the folds and wrinkles.
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If you are going to re-cover in leather (an excellent idea I think) you will need to be very careful which leather you use. Leather can be made and tanned in lots of different ways and only some methods produce good upholstery leather so you need a good supplier. The professional upholsterers used to thin down/shave the edges of the leather to get a wrinkle-free top surface. Some Australian upholstery leathers are quite thin and will stretch easily. As with the vinyl, you need some thin upholstery foam underneath to increase the comfort level. Be careful what you use to mark out your lines for cut-out on the underside as some markers penetrate through the leather over time and create unsightly marks on the surface (we have some items professionally upholstered where that has happened.)