I have a really nice (in its day) wood and leather chair. The sides are C
shaped, and made of some sort of springy strong steam formed wood. The seat
is leather. In its day, I imagine it was spendy. Good comfortable chair,
and leather is good.
Someone had a puppy, and one of the arms has chew marks. On the underside,
they are deeper, up to quarter inch. I don't want to restore this to as new
shape, just fill in the holes, shape, sand, and put some matching
stain/varnish over it. I know there are common wood fillers. Is that what
I would use, or is there something stronger, maybe epoxy based, or some
other type that has a little more holding power in an area where this might
flex?
Anyone know what a chair like that might be worth? I got it free at a yard
sale with some other "stuff".
I really like the chair.
Steve
"Steve B" wrote in message news:[email protected]...
>I have a really nice (in its day) wood and leather chair. The sides are C
>shaped, and made of some sort of springy strong steam formed wood. The
>seat is leather. In its day, I imagine it was spendy. Good comfortable
>chair, and leather is good.
>Someone had a puppy, and one of the arms has chew marks. On the underside,
>they are deeper, up to quarter inch. I don't want to restore this to as
>new
Having encountered this before I have to ask: Is there wood actually
missing or are there mostly, or entirely, just dents in the wood? I'd try
steaming the surface, even multiple times, and see just what is left... You
might discover that most or even all of the wood is still there but it was
crushed. Depending on the results you may need little more than a light
sanding and/or shellac sticks to fix the surface before refinishing.
Just a conservative thought before bringing out the big guns of fillers and
epoxy....
John
"Steve B" wrote:
>I have a really nice (in its day) wood and leather chair. The sides
>are C shaped, and made of some sort of springy strong steam formed
>wood. The seat is leather. In its day, I imagine it was spendy.
>Good comfortable chair, and leather is good.
>
> Someone had a puppy, and one of the arms has chew marks. On the
> underside, they are deeper, up to quarter inch. I don't want to
> restore this to as new shape, just fill in the holes, shape, sand,
> and put some matching stain/varnish over it. I know there are
> common wood fillers. Is that what I would use, or is there
> something stronger, maybe epoxy based, or some other type that has a
> little more holding power in an area where this might flex?
>
> Anyone know what a chair like that might be worth? I got it free at
> a yard sale with some other "stuff".
-----------------------------------------------
I'd use epoxy thickened with micro-balloons and colored with brown
pigment.
Check out System3.
http://tinyurl.com/coseof6
Lew
"Steve B" wrote in message news:[email protected]...
>"John Grossbohlin" <[email protected]> wrote
>> Having encountered this before I have to ask: Is there wood actually
>> missing or are there mostly, or entirely, just dents in the wood? I'd try
>> steaming the surface, even multiple times, and see just what is left...
>> You might discover that most or even all of the wood is still there but
>> it was crushed. Depending on the results you may need little more than a
>> light sanding and/or shellac sticks to fix the surface before
>> refinishing.
>>
>> Just a conservative thought before bringing out the big guns of fillers
>> and epoxy....
>>
> >John
>It is as you describe, just crushed, but moreso on the bottom. I'll try
>the steamer thing first.
The way I do this is I use a wash cloth and an electric iron. The wash cloth
holds a lot of moisture and the iron will bring it up to "steam hot" if you
put it on the "steam" setting. Mind you, you are not using the steam iron as
a steam iron... you are simply using it as a heat source.
John
On 2/15/2013 4:14 PM, Steve B wrote:
> "Leon" <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>> On 2/15/2013 4:02 PM, Steve B wrote:
>>> I have a really nice (in its day) wood and leather chair. The sides are
>>> C
>>> shaped, and made of some sort of springy strong steam formed wood. The
>>> seat
>>> is leather. In its day, I imagine it was spendy. Good comfortable
>>> chair,
>>> and leather is good.
>>>
>>> Someone had a puppy, and one of the arms has chew marks. On the
>>> underside,
>>> they are deeper, up to quarter inch. I don't want to restore this to as
>>> new
>>> shape, just fill in the holes, shape, sand, and put some matching
>>> stain/varnish over it. I know there are common wood fillers. Is that
>>> what
>>> I would use, or is there something stronger, maybe epoxy based, or some
>>> other type that has a little more holding power in an area where this
>>> might
>>> flex?
>>>
>>> Anyone know what a chair like that might be worth? I got it free at a
>>> yard
>>> sale with some other "stuff".
>>>
>>> I really like the chair.
>>>
>>> Steve
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>> How much did you pay for it?
>
> Nothing. The openings to the two C sides are facing rearward, so there is a
> hand rest. The wood is about 3/4" thick, and 2.5" wide, looks like layered.
> Nice springy seat, and soft cushion. Might be Bruno Mathsson, not labeled,
> but that style.
>
> Steve
>
>
I am clueless what it is worth but if you like it and it can be salvaged
it would be priceless to you.
"Leon" <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On 2/15/2013 4:02 PM, Steve B wrote:
>> I have a really nice (in its day) wood and leather chair. The sides are
>> C
>> shaped, and made of some sort of springy strong steam formed wood. The
>> seat
>> is leather. In its day, I imagine it was spendy. Good comfortable
>> chair,
>> and leather is good.
>>
>> Someone had a puppy, and one of the arms has chew marks. On the
>> underside,
>> they are deeper, up to quarter inch. I don't want to restore this to as
>> new
>> shape, just fill in the holes, shape, sand, and put some matching
>> stain/varnish over it. I know there are common wood fillers. Is that
>> what
>> I would use, or is there something stronger, maybe epoxy based, or some
>> other type that has a little more holding power in an area where this
>> might
>> flex?
>>
>> Anyone know what a chair like that might be worth? I got it free at a
>> yard
>> sale with some other "stuff".
>>
>> I really like the chair.
>>
>> Steve
>>
>>
>
>
> How much did you pay for it?
Nothing. The openings to the two C sides are facing rearward, so there is a
hand rest. The wood is about 3/4" thick, and 2.5" wide, looks like layered.
Nice springy seat, and soft cushion. Might be Bruno Mathsson, not labeled,
but that style.
Steve
"Leon" <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> wrote
>
> I am clueless what it is worth but if you like it and it can be salvaged
> it would be priceless to you.
We've had it for years, now. The connection in the back on the base was
broken out, and replaced with a piece of natural pine with four sheet rock
screws when we got it. We drug it out last evening for a party, and I sat
in it, and now want to fix just a couple of things with it. Drill out the
dowels, and put a new doweled piece in there properly, and stain it. Just
like to ask ahead of time, as glue is hard to remove and replace if you use
the wrong stuff.
If it was all cleaned up and fixed properly, I'd pay up to $50 for it, so I
guess that's what it's worth.
Steve
"John Grossbohlin" <[email protected]> wrote
> Having encountered this before I have to ask: Is there wood actually
> missing or are there mostly, or entirely, just dents in the wood? I'd try
> steaming the surface, even multiple times, and see just what is left...
> You might discover that most or even all of the wood is still there but it
> was crushed. Depending on the results you may need little more than a
> light sanding and/or shellac sticks to fix the surface before refinishing.
>
> Just a conservative thought before bringing out the big guns of fillers
> and epoxy....
>
> John
It is as you describe, just crushed, but moreso on the bottom. I'll try the
steamer thing first.
Steve
"John Grossbohlin" <[email protected]> wrote
> The way I do this is I use a wash cloth and an electric iron. The wash
> cloth holds a lot of moisture and the iron will bring it up to "steam hot"
> if you put it on the "steam" setting. Mind you, you are not using the
> steam iron as a steam iron... you are simply using it as a heat source.
>
> John
TY. I was wondering what I was going to do for steam. Why is the simple
solution the hardest one to come up with?
Steve
"Steve B" wrote in message news:[email protected]...
>"John Grossbohlin" <[email protected]> wrote
>
>> The way I do this is I use a wash cloth and an electric iron. The wash
>> cloth holds a lot of moisture and the iron will bring it up to "steam
>> hot" if you put it on the "steam" setting. Mind you, you are not using
>> the steam iron as a steam iron... you are simply using it as a heat
>> source.
>>
>> John
>TY. I was wondering what I was going to do for steam. Why is the simple
>solution the hardest one to come up with?
>Steve
I'm sure that eventually some company will market a "must have," "29 piece
dent steaming kit with it's own sturdy and convenient storage box." In the
mean time, I suggest not using the "guest" wash cloths for this repair. ;~)
John
On 2/15/2013 4:02 PM, Steve B wrote:
> I have a really nice (in its day) wood and leather chair. The sides are C
> shaped, and made of some sort of springy strong steam formed wood. The seat
> is leather. In its day, I imagine it was spendy. Good comfortable chair,
> and leather is good.
>
> Someone had a puppy, and one of the arms has chew marks. On the underside,
> they are deeper, up to quarter inch. I don't want to restore this to as new
> shape, just fill in the holes, shape, sand, and put some matching
> stain/varnish over it. I know there are common wood fillers. Is that what
> I would use, or is there something stronger, maybe epoxy based, or some
> other type that has a little more holding power in an area where this might
> flex?
>
> Anyone know what a chair like that might be worth? I got it free at a yard
> sale with some other "stuff".
>
> I really like the chair.
>
> Steve
>
>
How much did you pay for it?