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How to Repair Chair Caning or Tips and Techniques

Once youu2019re done with the tamping and pressing of your cane, lay a good bead of white glue or animal hide glue on top of the groove. DO NOT use the carpenteru2019s yellow glue! Next cancer to re-cane this chair will swear at you if you do. Soak the spline groove with vinegar to soften the glue. Then begin removing it with your caning chisel.<br>

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How to Repair Chair Caning or Tips and Techniques

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  1. How to Repair Chair Caning or Tips and Techniques Once you’re done with the tamping and pressing of your cane, lay a good bead of white glue or animal hide glue on top of the groove. DO NOT use the carpenter’s yellow glue! Next cancer to re-cane this chair will swear at you if you do. Soak the spline groove with vinegar to soften the glue. Then begin removing it with your caning chisel. Repairing a Punctured Seat Chair caning is an old craft, but one that anyone with a little patience and tenacity can learn. It’s an excellent hobby for retired or stay-at-home women and a great way to save some of those flea markets finds or valuable family heirloom antique chair caning that has fallen apart. In addition, seat weaving is a profitable and marketable skill that can be sold on a part-time basis to supplement income. First, make sure the frame of the chair is in good shape. It’s best to refinish the frame before attempting to restore the cane seat. Take the replacement seat out of the water and press it between absorbent folded towels to remove excess moisture. Apply wood glue, following package directions, to the back of the patch and position it over the hole. Then use a small awl or the tip of a screwdriver to tuck the ends under the existing cane seat. Glue again, if necessary, to secure the patch.

  2. Making a Fabric-Covered Seat While you’re reweaving the chair caning repair seat, remove the old padding from the wood base. Examine the padding for damage and examine the weaving pattern to see if you can figure out why the original seat failed. This may help you avoid the same problem with your new seat. Soak a replacement seat cushion in water to make it larger than the current one. When it’s dry, cut it so that it has about 4 in of overhang on all sides. Find the wooden wedges that should have come with your seat and use them to align it correctly front to back and left to right. A pressed cane is distinguished by no holes in the seat perimeter and is held in place by a spline (flexible “wooden” strip) that fits tightly into the groove around the finished seat edge. If you have pressed cane, determine the length of welting needed to go around the seat apron and cut enough 2-inch-wide bias strips to equal that amount, allowing for a few extra inches. Repairing Holes in the Cane Caning chair repair — and rattan, which is similar, although rattan refers more to the material than the process of weaving — are distinctive types of chairs. They are sturdy, attractive, and often inexpensive at garage sales or secondhand stores. Holes in the cane of a cane seat are eyesores that suggest the chair is in disrepair. Although a chair can be professionally

  3. regained to repair the holes, this is expensive. The cost of regaining is usually priced per hole, which means you may not be able to afford to have the entire seat or back rewoven. On older chair frames you might have blind-caning, which consists of a groove routed in the wood that holds spline (a flexible “wooden” strip) and cane strips in place. Newer chairs might have sheet caning. Which is made from pre-woven cane sheets wedged in the groove and held with a spline. This is less costly than a hand-woven cane but still requires a chair caning repair expertise to repair. You can also visit on jardin wicker website for online Making a Patch Woven cane furniture is a beautiful and comfortable addition to any home. Unfortunately, like all woven furnishings, it can develop tears in the fabric. The sooner these holes are repaired the longer your chair will last. If your chair caning repair machine-woven type with a hole, you may be able to glue in a patch without the need to replace the seat. This will not work for a hand-woven cane chair, however. A thicker material is required to repair these holes, such as duct tape or adhesive gear-repair tape. While these repairs are not permanent, they will keep your chair usable for a few more camping trips.

  4. Alternatively, use woodworking glue such as PVA (polyvinyl acetate). This is a water-based glue and easy to clean up. This is also the method of choice when repairing broken legs, rungs, or mortises. The process is a bit more difficult, but it is very effective. Thanks for visiting outfitclothsuite

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