Sooner or later, most of us are faced with the task of buying new furniture, including chairs. At the same time, it does not always make sense to buy new furniture at a fairly high price, since we can restore old chairs.

This approach has many advantages. Here are just the most obvious of them:

  • It won't take long, especially if you follow the instructions.
  • Using old Soviet furniture instead of buying new will allow you to save a lot.
  • It will help you create new, yet unique, interior items that no one else will have.

The thing is that chairs, like any other piece of furniture, are not something eternal. Even high-quality chairs are subject to aging and breakdown, especially in cases where we, in one way or another, “help” them, inadvertently causing damage. So it turns out that pieces of furniture become unusable. Of course, chairs, being one of the most actively used pieces of furniture, suffer first of all. In this case, as a rule, the seats of the chair are subject to the greatest damage, while all other parts remain more or less intact and unharmed.

If you are interested in restoring old chairs with your own hands at home, then you can be sure that you do not even need to have any extensive experience in decorating and repairing. It is enough to master a master class on reupholstery, painting, decoupage and other options for remodeling and decorating old furniture and you will be able to repair a chair. In any case, this experience will be useful in the future, since you will be able to upholster “grandmother’s” sofas and reupholster chairs of approximately the same age. Thanks to this approach, almost any furniture is provided with a second life, and not just a place in a landfill or in a closet, as often happens.

Meanwhile, the idea of ​​repairing furniture has one more, albeit not the most obvious, plus. The point is that how to restore old chairs at home will help not only make something new that already seemed unnecessary. In addition, you can feel the pleasure of embodying your creative energy.

How to update a chair or armchair

First of all, it is necessary to recall that the method of restoration depends on the exact nature of the damage. If we try to identify the main damage, we can identify the most common types of damage:

  • A broken leg, problems with the back, seat or other wooden part.
  • The upholstery is showing wear.
  • The paintwork on the wooden surface has worn out (especially during the restoration of Viennese chairs).

So, the method of restoring the chair will depend on which part is broken or worn out. So, the restoration and repair scheme should be chosen depending on the places (or places) in which problems exist.

Often it is enough to simply connect the separated parts, restoring one of the connecting parts that may have deteriorated over time. We are talking about groove and tenon. Wear or expansion of one of them leads to the fact that the chair gradually becomes unstable and begins to wobble on its legs. Repair, as a rule, consists of almost complete disassembly of the structure with extension of the tenon. To solve this problem you will have to, as they say, try.

On the other hand, if you need to restore a wooden chair in which the old paintwork has deteriorated, it can be done much easier. If the varnish is cracked, you just need to remove it and sand the surface with fine-grain sandpaper. And then apply another coat of paint. Or varnish, if this type of coating is provided for you. In any case, paint or varnish is your choice.

Reupholstering old chairs is also a fairly simple matter. To do this, you only need to replace the old worn or torn fabric with a new one. Let's take a closer look at the main stages of restoring chairs at home.

Recovery stages

Any chair can be made new. However, for this it is necessary to know at least in general terms the sequence of work. If you do not have experience in doing this, then it is recommended to study at least a short master class, which will be discussed below.

Preparatory stage

With the proper approach, even if the chair's upholstery is torn, the legs are wobbly, or the old varnish or paint is partially or completely cracked, it can be completely transformed by doing the restoration yourself. First of all, you will need the minimum required set of tools and materials:

  1. Tools for restoring a chair: a screwdriver, a hammer, 2 different screwdrivers, scissors, a brush, a clamp, a stapler, sandpaper, a small mallet and scissors.
  2. Materials: screws (self-tapping screws), staples for a stapler, glue for wooden furniture, foam rubber, paint and varnish, upholstery fabric.

After preparing the materials, try to clean the chair from dirt and dust by washing it thoroughly. To do this, you can wipe the chair with a slightly dampened sponge.

Disassembly

Before restoring the chair, it must be disassembled. After waiting for the chair to dry after wiping it with a damp sponge, you can proceed to disassembling it. The seats and backrest, as a rule, can be removed quite simply, after which the frame is disassembled. To avoid damaging the components when knocking them out, use a rubber mallet rather than a metal hammer. In any case, you should work very carefully.

If the table is assembled with screws or screws, then disassembling it is not difficult, since you just need to unscrew them. In any case, it is advisable to dismantle all parts, since they may interfere with repairs. In this case, if possible, you should mark the fastener parts or simply fold them in such a way that you cannot confuse them later.

As for how best to remove the remnants of old glue, especially epoxy. Those places where there are glue residues must be covered with pre-moistened rags or sponges. Any old and unnecessary rag will do. Keep it on the chair parts until the glue is completely wet, after which it can be quickly scraped off with a knife.

Please note! For this job, it is better to find an old dull knife, since there is no point in using a new or well-sharpened one.

Either way, after you've finished getting rid of the old glue, you'll need to leave some time for the wood pieces to dry. In cases where epoxy resin gets into a hard-to-reach place, it can be removed in much the same way, with the only difference being that you will need to use steam instead of water. If you don’t have any special devices that create hot steam under pressure, you can use the old-fashioned “method”, which involves using a hose with a tip that fits onto the spout of the kettle.

Step-by-step recovery instructions

So, after the preparation has been completed, we can proceed directly to restoring the old chair. Here's what you have to do:

  1. First of all, get rid of chips and possible cracks. This is done using putty.
  2. Then sand the wood thoroughly with sandpaper, first coarse and then fine, until the work surface is smooth.
  3. Take a good look at the stele and all its parts. If the legs are wobbly, then this needs to be addressed. There are several options: either using a wedge (it is driven in from the end of the axle), or wrapping the axle with a bandage and then covering it with glue.
  4. If the legs of the chair are very wobbly, but for one reason or another it was not possible to dismantle them, then there is one way that helps solve the problem. So, you need to drill a thin hole at the joint and then pour glue into it using a syringe.
  5. In order for the glue to “stick” better and the connection to become reliable, place any available weight on the seat and wait until the glue is completely dry.
  6. After this, the chair seat is restored, if necessary. It can consist of either soft upholstery or be made of wood. It all depends on the design of the chair. As for remaking the frame, you can use several different finishing options for it, ranging from varnish or red coating to such a rare technique as decoupage.

By the way! Alternatively, you can sew covers. This will not only update the old chair, but also make it attractive due to the interchangeable design of the covers.

DIY restoration

Now let's see what can be done with antique chairs during restoration and how best to decorate them.

Decor using fabric

This decoration is quite simple to do. You need to either reupholster the old soft places or sew covers. By the way, a similar approach can be applied to sofas and other pieces of furniture.

Backrest update

There are different options. Among the most common ones that can give chairs a new life are decoupage and the use of textiles (including denim).

Restoration by reupholstery

The main thing in this case is the choice of high-quality and durable fabric. These include: jute, tapestry and jacquard. Sometimes velor will do. Upholstering chairs using tapestry is an excellent technique, which, by the way, gives an excellent result in the end. By the way, you can add a pattern woven using the macrame method to the fabric.

We use macrame for decoration

If we talk about macrame in a little more detail, it should be noted that this can be done even if you do not have the skills to weave using this method.

One possibility is this: If the back of the old chair is soft, remove the upholstery and weave a simple square mesh. By the way, the size of the cells can be either large or small. To give the updated chair a more harmonious appearance, you can also redo the seat upholstery.

Decoupage technique

This option can turn your chair into a true decoration. Using this method, you can decorate a lot of things by performing various crafts, even decorating a souvenir box. So, you can extend the life of antique chairs, however, only if all their structural elements are made of wood.

Jute decoration

And finally, I would like to say a few words about how you can decorate an old, for example, Soviet chair if you have unnecessary or torn jeans. There are two options for decorating: completely upholster the chair using jute, and use denim as an additional decoration. This could be a strip or a small flap.

In almost every home you can find several old chairs, the appearance of which leaves much to be desired. Don't rush to throw them away. Restoration will help breathe a second life into an old but beloved piece of furniture.

Restoration gives the chair a second life and creates unique furniture.

With just a little effort, old chairs or armchairs will turn into real works of art and will delight their owners for many years.

Give a second life

Restoring chairs with your own hands is not so much a complicated process as it is a painstaking one.

Before you begin, you must carefully inspect the product. Based on the results of the inspection, it will become clear what to do: simply reupholster the chair seat, update the paintwork, or carry out more serious repairs.

If the chair is loose, then the reason should be sought in the tenon joints. Over time, the wood dries out and the connecting elements begin to dangle in their sockets. To eliminate this and strengthen the structure, you need to increase the size of the tenon, compact the drawers and replace the power jumpers.

Diagram of chair assembly and reupholstery.

Restoring the paintwork will require less effort. The old paint will have to be removed, the surface of the parts must be sanded and coated with paint or varnish. To perform the work efficiently, the chair must be disassembled: remove the seat, unscrew the back and legs. If the design of the product is complex and has many small parts, then during disassembly a diagram of the location of each part should be drawn up. This will make it easier to assemble the chair after the restoration is complete.

The easiest way to update an old chair is to replace the upholstery. Replacing old and worn fabric can change the appearance of furniture beyond recognition. If necessary, updating chairs with your own hands can be done in one way or include all of the listed types of work.

Preparing for recovery

Before starting work, you need to prepare tools and materials. If the chair needs serious repairs, you will need:

Before restoration, the old chair must be disassembled.

  1. Screwdriver.
  2. Screwdrivers.
  3. Hammer.
  4. Mallet.
  5. Clamps.
  6. Metal clamps.
  7. Sandpaper of various grain sizes.
  8. Construction stapler and staples.
  9. Acrylic paint and brushes.
  10. Scissors, pencil or felt-tip pen, cardboard, tailor's tape measure.
  11. Foam rubber.
  12. Thick fabric for upholstery.
  13. Bucket, rag and dishwashing liquid.

The first step towards restoring the stool is to clean it of dust and dirt. To wash it well, you will need warm water, a soft cloth and some dishwashing liquid. This solution will help to quickly clean the chair not only of dirt, but also of some of the old varnish. The washing procedure must be carried out quickly so that the wood does not come into contact with water for long, and then everything must be thoroughly dried.

The next stage of restoration is dismantling. First you need to remove the back and rear legs. The main thing here is to adhere to the rule: assembling the chair should be carried out in the reverse order. This is the only way all the holes will coincide with each other. In addition, all parts and fasteners must be marked. This will also make assembly easier.

Tools for restoring chairs: batting, upholstery fabric, stapler, staples, mounting adhesive foam, cardboard, screwdriver, scissors.

If the heads of the screws that hold the parts together are hidden in the sockets and they are covered with wooden plugs, then you can remove them using a chisel. If this does not work, then you need to use a drill whose diameter is equal to the diameter of the plug and drill it out. The opened screw is turned out with a screwdriver. A drop of industrial oil applied to the screw will make the job easier.

If the chair was held together with epoxy resin, hot water will help remove it. Wet a rag or napkin and place it on the gluing area. Repeat the procedure until the glue completely softens. Then you need to scrape it off with a knife and dry the parts. Hot steam will help soften the glue in tight joints. To do this, a rubber hose is placed on the spout of the kettle, and a stream of steam is directed to the connection.

Processing and assembly of parts

To properly restore a chair, it must be carefully inspected. All parts must be sanded. Glue and tighten any large cracks found using clamps. Glue smaller ones and secure with paper tape. Excess holes and chips on parts should be filled with a slurry of glue and small sawdust. You can continue work only after the glue has completely dried.

To make it easier to work with sandpaper, it needs to be cut into narrow strips and glued to wooden blocks 20-40 mm wide and 300-350 mm long. Paper should be used in different grain sizes. The surface after treatment should be flat and smooth. A grinding machine will help make the job easier and significantly reduce processing time.

Be sure to check all connections. If the legs of a chair are inserted directly into the seat and over time they begin to sit loosely in their sockets, then to strengthen it it is enough to wedge them. A cut is made at the ends of the upper narrowed parts of the legs and a wedge is driven into it. Thanks to this technique, the diameter of the end will become larger and it will fit more tightly into the socket, which must first be coated with glue.

It will be more difficult to restore chairs with crossbars between the legs and drawers under the seat. In such structures, a tongue-and-groove connection and sizing are used to fasten parts. When the seam weakens, you need to drill a hole with a small diameter from the inside and drop a few drops of glue into it with a syringe. When a tenon is weakened, it must be strengthened with thin wedges. Matches or wood chips dipped in glue are suitable for this purpose. They need to be hammered into the nest together with the thorn.

If the chair is very loose, then in addition to gluing the joints, you need to strengthen the structure with wooden blocks. They should be attached with screws to the frames, which are used to connect the internal corners of the frame. The bars and drawers must be perfectly adjusted to each other. Even the smallest gap between them will cause the entire structure to skew.

Now you can start assembling the chair frame. All parts must be installed in place. In order for the glue to set, it is necessary to provide sufficient pressure. Tighten the glued elements using clamps or cords. A bucket of water can be placed on the seat. This will provide the necessary pressure. With such a load, the chair must stand for at least 24 hours. Excess glue should be removed immediately with a wet cloth.

Replacing the soft seat

If your chair has a soft seat that needs replacing, now is the time to start. First you need to remove the old fabric and padding. If there are defects on the wooden surface, they must be eliminated.

Markings should be made on the new foam rubber. The old seat is applied to the foam rubber and outlined with a felt-tip pen. To cut evenly, you need to take a sharp knife. Then make a pattern on the fabric, taking into account allowances for hems and foam. Next, lay the pattern out face down on a flat surface. Foam rubber is placed on top, and then the seat. The seam allowances need to be turned to the wrong side, pulled tight and aligned with the front side. Align the folds at the corners, fold the edges and attach the material using a stapler. If you don’t have it on hand, you can use small carnations with wide heads. Secure the updated seat to the frame with metal corners and screws. If the chair has a soft back, then it is restored in the same manner as the seat.

A completely restored and transformed chair will serve its owners for many years.

In my coral room, everything has been in its place for a long time: , above the bed - , instead of a bicycle - . And only the old chair was an eyesore for me. Finally I got around to restoring it: painting and reupholstering the seat.

I'm telling you how I did it and sharing the process. Perhaps this story will inspire some of you to update your furniture.

A few years ago I read a blog post on A Beautiful Mess about a dining room remodel. I remembered the mismatched chairs that they put together, painted with bright yellow paint, and due to the same color, the chairs began to look very harmonious and original. Since then, those yellow chairs have never left my mind.

Please note that I am not a restorer and the process I am describing should not be used for restoring antique pre-revolutionary chairs. In this case, it is better to contact a professional. But if you have old Soviet chairs lying around that you don’t want to throw away, then you can update them and give them a new life.

To restore a chair with your own hands you will need:

  • newspapers for surface protection;

1. Remove the seat and sand the surface

I didn't use any special primer, I just removed the seat from the chair (it can be attached with nails or screws) and sanded the entire wood surface of the chair with sandpaper.

2. Paint the chair

An important question is what paint to paint the chair. It’s very simple: I came to the store and asked the consultant to advise what paint would be suitable for painting a wooden chair. I was recommended semi-matte Tikurilla Pesto 30. I chose the color from the palettes in the store and the consultant mixed me the right jar of paint.

I painted the chair three times in total. When you apply paint for the first time, you want to exclaim “Whoa?” The paint is applied in a thin layer, the dark wood shines through it, and the brush leaves grooves in the paint. The main thing here is patience.

Between each coat I waited a day for the paint to dry completely.

3. Choose fabric for upholstering the chair seat

Ohhh! The choice of fabric was almost the most difficult moment in this whole story. I was about to go to the Internet to ask Google what it could tell me about fabric stores in St. Petersburg. What I found was a sad sadness. The sites are in the style of the early 2000s and the photos of the assortment are such that I was amazed. Driving around the city looking for fabric, not being sure that I would find what I needed, somehow didn’t make me smile at all.

And then I remembered my favorite fabric store, Myata Fabric, with beautiful modern prints. Now the guys are launching their own fabric production and will soon open a relaunched website, and I was lucky to grab one of the last pieces from the old collection. And I don’t regret for a second that I had to wait until the fabric reached me by mail from Yekaterinburg. It was definitely worth the wait.

4. Cut the fabric for the seat

Several years ago the seat was already reupholstered, but the cat sharpened its nails on the old fabric and it became unsightly. At the same time, the seat itself was completely normal, so I did not change the fabric and foam inside, but simply decided to wrap the seat with new fabric.

I laid the seat on the fabric and cut it around the perimeter with an allowance of 4-5 cm.

5. Secure the fabric with a stapler

First, I secured the fabric with a stapler on four sides so that the fabric would not fidget and then separately walked around the perimeter. First on the sides of the seat and only lastly on the corners. During the process, I made sure that the fabric was well stretched, but not too tight.

Perhaps it was my simple staple gun, or maybe it was the plywood seat, but the staples did not go all the way into the seat, so I tapped them all with a hammer to secure them properly.

6. Cut off excess fabric

I trimmed off the excess fabric to make it look neater. It is especially important to do this in the corners. Separately, you can cut out a plug for the bottom of the seat, so it will look even neater. But my chair will not move much, but will stand in one place, so I decided to ignore this step.

7. Attach the seat to the chair

Depending on what fasteners you originally used, use them to secure the seat to the base of the chair. I attached the seat with a glue gun, since my chair is used more for decorative purposes - it stands in a corner, I put a blanket, clothes, and put a bag on it. If you plan to use the chair to its fullest extent, then it is better to take care of a more serious fastening.

This is what happened in the end!

Almost every house where several generations of household members live contains items from outdated furniture sets. Old wooden chairs, worn by time, but with an original design, often become family heirlooms. It’s hard to throw them away, but it’s also not always possible to fit them into the updated interior.

In such a situation, there is no other option left except to update the old chair too. What exactly can be done to give rare furniture a second life?

Options for possible operations for the restoration of old chairs

  1. Processing, restoration and painting of wooden base.
  2. Reupholstery or replacement of soft parts (seats and soft backs).
  3. Decoupage, painting or other finishing.

Examples of how you can restore a chair with your own hands

How to restore an old chair with a varnished (or painted) base and an upholstered seat?

What should you stock up on?

  • Sandpaper (coarse and fine).
  • Stapler with staples (construction).
  • Paint (acrylic or other quick-drying paint).
  • Varnish for surface treatment of wooden parts.
  • Solvent.
  • Wood glue (or universal glue).
  • Brush.
  • Scissors.
  • Marker.
  • Technical fabric (flannel).
  • Upholstery fabric.
  • Foam filling.

Step by step instructions

If you also have a chair with a soft back, the latter is restored in the same way as the seat.

How to restore a lacquered wooden chair?

What should you stock up on?

  • Acetone.
  • Sponge for household purposes.
  • Brush.

The process itself

  1. Apply solvent to the sponge.
  2. Treat all surfaces of the chair, removing the old varnish coating.
  3. Using a brush, open up the chair with new varnish.
  4. Let dry.
  5. The chair has been updated. You can use it.

Subtleties

  1. To repair minor damage to wooden parts, you can use putty you made yourself: flour + PVA glue. This mixture should be as thick as plasticine.
  2. To refresh the color of wood, use stain (it comes in different shades), securing it with furniture varnish, as stain will smear clothes.

Other ideas for restoring old chairs

How to restore a chair should be decided based on its condition, available materials, funds planned for this action, as well as your imagination and creative abilities. Here are some of the possible variations.

  • “Aging” the wooden part of the chair by applying craquelure varnish between two layers of acrylic paint of different colors. In this case, cracks form in the top layer of paint, through which the contrasting bottom layer is visible.

  • Decoupage or painting. You can easily find a description of the decoupage technique on the Internet; painting, in general, is a matter of your taste and imagination. To apply original drawings, use a brush and acrylic paints. Before this, the surface of the chair must be cleaned of the old coating, puttied, sanded and painted with base paint. Painted parts need to be varnished, then the product will last longer.


  • Updating old chairs with what you have on hand (leather belts, old jeans, fur vests, etc.). The results of this non-standard approach are presented in the photo.

  • Restoration in the “ethno” style. Same preparation and painting. Only the painting contains ethnic patterns and ornaments, which are easier to apply using stencils. Such a chair can also be decorated with elements of weaving using the macrame technique on the auxiliary membranes or on the legs of the chair. You can also weave or knit the backrest and fabric for seat upholstery.


  • Application of covers. These can be either designer seat covers or covers that hide almost the entire chair completely. There is plenty of room for creative individuals to roam here. Original patterns, embroidery, knitting, etc. - everything will come in handy.



In addition, it should be remembered that the new or old chair must fully fit into the surrounding environment. Choose paint and upholstery materials that complement the room's walls and other furnishings.

, among which there are sometimes pieces of furniture that were very useful, but are outdated and are usually replaced.

But even if you bought a new piece of furniture to replace the old one, you can turn the latter into something different, but no less useful.

Old chairs can be found in almost every home, and if you really want to replace them, you still shouldn’t throw them away, since old chairs can be used to make other useful things for your home, garden and cottage.

For example, you can use an old chair to make a towel rack, a garden bench, a convenient pet feeder and much more.

Here are the most interesting crafts that you can make using old chairs:


Remaking an old chair with your own hands: a street bench.

For such a bench you will need two or three chairs. These chairs can be spray painted or left with an antique look.

1.1. If the chairs are too high, you can file down their legs a little.

1.2. You can purchase special cushions for chairs. Some are sold separately (in which case they should be joined with a stitch), but you can also find 4 pads joined together and cut off the excess part.

1.3. To make three chairs look more like one bench, you can purchase or find two or three boards that need to be cut to the required length (the length of three chairs) and joined.

*If desired, you can round the ends.

1.4. Prepare a piece of fabric whose length and width exceeds the length and width of the pads. Lay the fabric pattern down on the floor and place pillows on it.

1.5. Place the joined boards on top of the pads.

1.6. Bend the fabric and use a stapler to attach it to the boards.


1.7. All that remains is to place the boards with cushions on the chairs and add a few simple pillows for decoration.

New life for old wooden chairs: feeders for large dogs.

Tall dogs will find it easier if the feeders are a little higher, especially for older dogs who find it difficult to keep their head down all the time.

You just need a file tool, a bowl and a pencil.

2.1. Before you start cutting a hole in the chair, you need to sand it first.


2.2. Place the bowl upside down on a chair and trace with a pencil. After this, inside the resulting circle, draw a circle of smaller diameter. This can be done with a compass or a plate of smaller diameter than the bowl.


2.3. Make a hole inside the circle with a drill, from which you can then begin to cut the circle. You can first cut a circle with a smaller diameter and check the stability of the bowl in the formed circle. Make the circle even larger if necessary.


2.4. Sand the inside of the hole with sandpaper.

*You can paint the chair and then insert the bowl.



Wall organizer from an old chair with a backrest.

By dividing the chair into parts, you can create a wall hanger or organizer, as well as a comfortable stool.


The back and seat will not be easy to separate, but then everything will be easy.

If necessary, sand all parts and paint.

To make a comfortable stool you will need:

Tools for separating chair parts

Chair seat

Durable fabric and pillow filling or regular small pillow

Stapler

Hot glue (if necessary) to hold the filled fabric in place.

1. Attach the fabric to the seat using a stapler, but leave one side untouched to fill the resulting pocket with pillow filling.


*You can also use a small pillow instead of filling.


2. Attach the seat back to the chair and you have a beautiful stool.

3. For the wall organizer you will need hooks. Once you have screwed or glued the (self-adhesive) hooks, the organizer can be hung on a wall in the hallway, room or bathroom (on a door, for example), where you can hang towels on the hooks.

Repurposing an old chair into a menu board

An old folding chair can be used to make a beautiful menu board.

To do this you will need:

MDF sheets

Seat separation tools

Blackboard paint

Sandpaper (if necessary)

Paint or spray paint (if necessary).

1. From MDF, cut out squares of the required size for each chair (if there is only one chair, then accordingly there will be one square from MDF).

2. Paint the MDF square with chalkboard paint.


3. Remove the seat from the chair and bolt on a painted MDF square in its place.


* In this example, for beauty, 2 old wooden parts were attached to the board, which match the style of the board.

4. To ensure that the legs stand properly, you can attach a chain between them.


How to convert a chair into a coat rack


All you need to do is remove the back of the old chair, sand it down and paint it.

After that, attach the hook of the size you need and hang the hanger in any convenient place.

Bathroom hanger made from an old chair


You will need a chair back. It can be carefully cut down, sanded and painted if desired.

The seat can be cut in half and one half can be used as a hanging shelf.


This shelf can be attached with bolts and special glue. You can use corners to secure the shelf in place. This stage is optional, it is suitable for those who like to work with wood.

Such a hanger can be attached to the door in the bathroom, kitchen, cottage or other room where it may be needed.






How to repurpose old chairs into shoe storage


Separate the seat from the chair. If this is not possible, then you will have to cut a large hole into which you will then need to insert the basket.

Find any basket (metal or plastic) and use strong thread or wire to attach it to the chair (by tying it to the frame of the chair).




What to make from an old chair: a swing

If you cut off the legs of an old chair, sand it with sandpaper and paint it, it can be used as a seat for a swing in the country or in the garden, for example.


You will need:

Strong rope

Metal rings

Eye screws

Additional details if necessary.







Here is another swing option:

Second life of a chair: garden shelf


An old chair can be turned into a convenient shelf for flowers or storing various garden tools.

You will need a chair back and part (or all) of the seat. Simply separate the desired part of the seat (you may need to saw off the chair legs) and attach the shelf to the wall or door.

Sand the part with sandpaper and paint.


DIY drinks shelf from an old chair


1. Find a bucket to hold ice and drinks. It is desirable that it have handles that rest on the frame of the chair.


2. Separate the seat from the chair, cut it down or make a hole in the seat.

* Using a strong rope, you can tie a bucket or large bowl to a chair if there are no handles. The most convenient way is to make holes in the bucket through which the thread is threaded.

Second life of an old chair: flowerbed


For your garden, you can create a beautiful flower bed using an old chair.

To do this you will need:

Flower pot

Jigsaw

Sandpaper (for woodworking)

Paint (if desired)

Sealant paste for smoothing out unevenness in the opening of the chair (if necessary).

*If you want to attach more pots of flowers to the chair, you can use a pipe clamp to hold the pots or jars.







DIY photo of flower beds made from old chairs





This article is also available in the following languages: Thai

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    THANK YOU so much for the very useful information in the article. Everything is presented very clearly. It feels like a lot of work has been done to analyze the operation of the eBay store

    • Thank you and other regular readers of my blog. Without you, I would not have been motivated enough to dedicate much time to maintaining this site. My brain is structured this way: I like to dig deep, systematize scattered data, try things that no one has done before or looked at from this angle. It’s a pity that our compatriots have no time for shopping on eBay because of the crisis in Russia. They buy from Aliexpress from China, since goods there are much cheaper (often at the expense of quality). But online auctions eBay, Amazon, ETSY will easily give the Chinese a head start in the range of branded items, vintage items, handmade items and various ethnic goods.

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        What is valuable in your articles is your personal attitude and analysis of the topic. Don't give up this blog, I come here often. There should be a lot of us like that. Email me I recently received an email with an offer to teach me how to trade on Amazon and eBay. And I remembered your detailed articles about these trades. area I re-read everything again and concluded that the courses are a scam. I haven't bought anything on eBay yet. I am not from Russia, but from Kazakhstan (Almaty). But we also don’t need any extra expenses yet. I wish you good luck and stay safe in Asia.

  • It’s also nice that eBay’s attempts to Russify the interface for users from Russia and the CIS countries have begun to bear fruit. After all, the overwhelming majority of citizens of the countries of the former USSR do not have strong knowledge of foreign languages. No more than 5% of the population speak English. There are more among young people. Therefore, at least the interface is in Russian - this is a big help for online shopping on this trading platform. eBay did not follow the path of its Chinese counterpart Aliexpress, where a machine (very clumsy and incomprehensible, sometimes causing laughter) translation of product descriptions is performed. I hope that at a more advanced stage of development of artificial intelligence, high-quality machine translation from any language to any in a matter of seconds will become a reality. So far we have this (the profile of one of the sellers on eBay with a Russian interface, but an English description):
    https://uploads.disquscdn.com/images/7a52c9a89108b922159a4fad35de0ab0bee0c8804b9731f56d8a1dc659655d60.png