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Category: Tutorials

Funky Flamingo Chair

I just recently took on a home project and it was so much fun!
I found this chair at a thrift store for $25. It’s really well made so I grabbed it!

After I had painted it and recovered it, I was in love! This chair is big enough to sit crisscross and my dog, Parker loved it too.

However, there was one thing that wasn’t perfect. The chair was only comfortable for about 5 minutes. The longer I sat in it, the more I sank uncomfortably deeper into the seat.

Ugh! I thought about it and thought about it. I mean, I had done so much work on the chair. It was finished…but it wasn’t. I decide that if I put this much work into a chair, I want it to be comfortable, too. I want people to enjoy sitting in the chair, not just look at it.

I knew I had to start over by taking it all apart again. The comfort of this Funking Flamingo Chair is just as important as how it looks.

How? That was my question also.

The answer? Webbing. So, I learned how to reweb a chair. I decided to record the whole process and share it as a tutorial. Maybe you are the reason! Have you wanted to learn how to update your dining chairs but just didn’t know where to start? Do you have that one ugly chair that you can’t get rid of but it’s just sad?

Well, I got good news. YOU CAN DO THIS!

In this first tutorial, I will be removing the old upholstery and rewebbing the chair seat and chair back.


Heirloom traditions Paint

Heirloom Traditions Paint
I used the color “Iron Gate”.

Upholstery Jute Webbing
I used the 3.5″ width for this chair.

Pink Velvet

1 1/2 yards Stretch Velvet Fabric 

Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links, meaning I get a small commission if you decide to make a purchase through my links, at no cost to you.

6 Easy Steps to Wire Your Art Properly and Safely


Before You Start

Make sure you have a large surface and that it is very clean. You will work with the canvas face down. Make sure the surface is free of dirt. A bed sheet is what I usually use. You just want the surface of your canvas to be safe.

Tools Needed

Step 1

Measure from the top of the canvas. With a pencil, mark a point a little over a quarter distance of the entire canvas.
For example, in my video, I measured 6″ from the top on a canvas that was 18″w x 24″h.
To make sure it hangs close to the wall, avoid placing the wire near the center of the canvas.

Step 2

Using the marks you just made, screw in the D-Rings to the wood frame of the canvas. I would place something over the back of your painting in case your screw driver slips. The last thing you want is a hole in your painting!

Step 3

Run the picture wire through the first D-Ring. Take the wire across the canvas and run the wire through the opposite D-Rings.

Step 4

Loop the wire through the D-ring into a knot and pull tight with needle nose pliers. Then do the other side. Make sure the wire is tight but has just enough give so it can hang properly. I pull on the center of the wire and then tighten the other side as seen in video

Step 5

After knotting the wire to both D-rings, tightly twist or wrap the excess wire back around itself for each side. (See video)

Step 6

Cut excess wire making sure you cut close as possible to the twist knot. This is to ensure you don’t stab yourself of someone else with the protruding wire.

That’s it!

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