@@tigrehermanobut I appreciate the tutorial I have these exact chairs that are falling apart and was looking for a way to keep the frame and add some color to my deck!
@@iamvandoza in Mexico they are designed with Huichol patterns, absolutely beautiful, very ornamental. Such wow. You can buy them cheap and they're made of metal frames (very thin) wrapped in cord, it is resistant and at the same time it kinda feels like you float a bit.
Here’s a tip to make your weaving a bit easier. In your local Walmart or craft store yarn section, purchase the longest size “K/6.50mm” Tunisian or double ended crochet hook you can find. Once you have your warp (teal cord) completed, use the hook to weave the weft (pink cord) through by the loop end. It will make the process much easier for you. Thank you for sharing your craft with everyone.
@@olenkamoura Sure. But Tunisian hooks are much longer. I have even made a few for myself & friends, using 1/4” & 1/2” 3 foot crafting dowel rods found in most craft stores. One of those would span the entire width of the chair.
This reminds me of a potholder weaving kit that I received as a child. One thing I thought of while watching you do this was that the weaving kit I received, had a long metal hook that you could weave in and out of the weaving to pull in your loops. You could probably make a long hook by using a metal coat hanger. I actually have metal frame chairs that had wicker material on them. The wicker has broken up from the weather and I wanted to keep the chairs but I didn’t know how to repair them. I am not sure I can do this project, but I might give it a try.
This is excellent instruction. I have those exact chairs and just thought today about how to do exactly what you have done. So thrilled to have found your video. Hats off to you. I absolutely cannot believe all the horrible disrespectful comments. Just focus on those of us that truly appreciate the time it took to show us this ❤
I tried this today and it turned out nicely. Thanks for showing the constrictor knot up close. Definitely had to do that one multiple times. The cost of para cord probably is more than a new chair, but it’s more about the fixing and diverting from landfill part. I used 200 ft for the warp and 100 ft for the weft. FYI.
Perfect, absolutely just what I was looking for. I have two very similar chairs where the woven plastic has failed and I didn't want to thrown them away. I couldn't figure out what to use to reweave the seat NOR how to attach it to a metal bar. All the other videos on weaving seats pertain to wooden seats and so attaching the weaving material would be done by tacking it to the wood...obviously that wouldn't work for this seat. Thank you, you've solved the two issues I couldn't figure out. What to use (that would be OK if caught in the rain) and how to attach it to a metal chair. Thumbs up all the way.
I did a chiar like your, i used two ysrs sticks for the bottom and back. One stick to open the space, the second one to push the paracord through. Thanks for the idea.
Excellent. Can match different frame with the color of cord. Ignore the salty trolls. That stripped material didn't have a chance in the solar flare generation. I've been looking for this solution for ages.
Glad you did this video. I have a couple of patio chairs that the weather and the dog have taken their toll on. I’ve been wondering about redoing them in paracord so very timely video for me.
If you really want to upcycle, use a braided rag rope method, use old clothing pants and shirts (adult) work well or old sheets, any fabric will work. I would suggest to use different types of fabric, colors ect. tshirt rope could work but having tshirt with other more stiffer material would work better. can be very colorful chiar, and much cheaper than having to buy something.
Oh my it came out so beautiful, I have a patio set and the material got all discolored and broke I am sure it will take me four times as long as you did on every chair but it is worth it. Thank you very much
Excellent explanation on this! I have started a chair but a little confused on the side weaves 😟 This video definitely has given me the visual I need!!! Thank You so very much!! Now if I can just have a little of your confidence I know I can finish it tomorrow 👍
I have probably done at least a hundred chairs. I still have the first one that is around 30 yrs old. I am always looking for old chairs at garage sales. The macrame store use to have heavyduty frames for sale.
It's worth noting here that a 1000 ft spool of paracord is roughly 50$ US, and one of the chairs destroyed for the demonstration in this video can be bought for anywhere between 25$ to 40$. If you want a new chair, this is not exactly a money-saving endeavour (plus all the time put into it), nor is it a profit-maker (unless working on commission). However, if you want to invest three days of time and 50$ of materials in a personalized hand-woven chair for yourself and your patio, go for it. For a slightly thriftier option, 1/8 inch twisted nylon or diamond-braided polypropylene will run you about 30$ for 1000 ft. And slightly thicker cord will decrease the amount required... at some relative cost to comfort.
I was trying to look for some cord at this price and I couldn't find anything for less than 4 times the price ($50 for 1000'). I wonder if it's inflated right now.
And if you live out side of the US where prices are ummm very expensive when it comes to the said used cord when I priced it up it cost $120 just for 500 meters of cord as for the chairs they are around $150-200 for a set so I went to the tip and got a couple there for free and using something a lot cheaper for cord which may or may not last for very long out here in the Outback with the high UV we have here and high temps getting to around 56°c in the height of full summer. As for the weaving I prefer the 1 to 1 weft cording than the double he was using.
@@dawsie We have this chair for $10-12, or $22-24 for a set of 2 chairs and a metal/glass table. (DK) ...but I have to pay $400 for 500 meters of 4mm paracord.
I used to be absolutely flat broke and even now when I can afford my furniture I about had an aneurysm when he destroyed that brand new pristine chair. Not going to subscribe because I don’t want to end up in the hospital. 🤣 This would be ok for grandma’s old scratchy lawn chair that needs a redo, perhaps.
It's not upcycling if you ruin a perfectly good chair for the frame, at best thats hacking it and at worst its stupidly wasteful. Paracord it AFTER a good long life, not before.
Also he’s absolutely terrible at explaining how to weave. You would be better off and learn more by watching hand textile weavers. And if you plan your weave and measure before hand like with certain textile weaves you won’t run out of cord and need to make the unnecessary knots (like in the corners where you could wrap it and hide it in on the underside of the frame in the pink wrap) which could cause weak points and un raveling. Just a thought though.
you can also use the yard stick to pull the cord back through the weave. just loop it through the hole on the end, or take a piece of scrap and tie a loop on the end and catch your contrast color with that.
Just finished a seat for my former vinyl-strap chair. Great tutorial, although I did find my most efficient method was just shoving the active line through the far side of the weave, pushing it up the weave, and then folding over the end of the string and "stitching" between the strands, rather than using this yardstick method. Maybe my weave was too tight but I did give the yardstick a good try before switching. And toward the end, I found it necessary to stitch 2-3 strands or even one at a time and then apply pressure to tighten it, otherwise I couldn't get it straight.
@@kategardner5678 I'm really not sure. I have another chair I'll need to do soon so I can try keeping better track of that one. But we have 400ft of black line and at least that much green for the second chair. Figured that should be plenty.
It'd be a little less sturdy, but you could try it! You could also size up the cord diameter to compensate. Here's a link to our size chart: www.paracordplanet.com/paracord-sizes/. Let us know if that helps!
Not familiar with working with this type of cord so I was wondering... When you cut the cord, does it tend to unravel? How do you stop that? Is the cord made of something you could singe with a flame to melt it a little to keep it from unravelling? I would like to try that on a chair I have of a different style (when it gets shabbier of course).
Paracord is a tube of nylon fabric over nylon threads, if you want it to "flatten out" you can pull the white threads out. Easily seal the cut end with heat, just don't catch it on fire!
I think he did that to show how it's done. The cords going across show up better in pink. But it looks good. Makes me wonder if you could do a plaid design with different colors of cord. More knots, I know. More time in the process, but the design would be worth it. I would like to try that.
If you have Facebook, you can direct message the photo to @ParacordPlanet! If not, we can try to help you here in the comments. What kind of chair is it? 🪐
A tunisian crochet hook could help weaving. They are LONG crochet books. And you cannot get a large sized hook. The roundness would slide in tight spaces.
Thank you so much, I just got a very old chair round metal like the one you fixed. I do want to do it with rope? can I follow the pattern with different material? this is very awesome, I feel hopeful. I called a mid century store by my neighbor to ask for a restoration place and the store person told me that caning wicking or weaving is very expensive and that the chair was not of worth, I still want to do it!!! a bit on the boho side!?!?!?! Thanksagain!!
You could totally do this with rope! Keep in mind that if you use a natural fiber like cotton, it will degrade more quickly when left outside. The paracord that we use is about 1/8" wide, but you could use thicker or thinner depending on your preference. Natural fibers would look great in the weave used in rush chairs. Alternatively you could use something like a synthetic macramé cord.
1000 feet of paracord is currently $60-80 depending on the type... Any tips on being able to do for less? Or is it possible to use less paracord, or another kind of material? I have 6 chairs, so the cost will matter. Thanks!
Hi! Wow, that sounds like a fun project. Have you ever used the code "UA-cam" during checkout on paracordplanet.com? Each customer can use it once and get 15% off their order. Let us know if that works for you/helps at all!
Interesting! I've noticed at the beach near me there's always tons of folding chairs thrown out. They usually have torn fabric, but are structurally fine. Is there a way to repair those at all similar to this? It seems like such a waste.
If you use a long Tunisian Crochet hook, you can weave the hook through and then pull the paracord loop back through your "shed." Then beat back with a jumbo plastic comb that fits the paracord through the teeth.
I think it looks great and if you had not seen the cutting of the plastic seat you could have appreciated the artists "new" seat and been encouraged without judgment and misplaced opinion.
1M Views, woohoo! Nice continued work on the Chanel, Ross.
Thanks for the kind words! It's hard to turn lumps of coal like us into diamonds, but thanks to Ty, we can sparkle the way we were meant to!
@@ParacordPlanet 🤣
He is basically showing the traditional mexican chairs and pretending to be creative
@@tigrehermanobut I appreciate the tutorial I have these exact chairs that are falling apart and was looking for a way to keep the frame and add some color to my deck!
@@iamvandoza in Mexico they are designed with Huichol patterns, absolutely beautiful, very ornamental. Such wow. You can buy them cheap and they're made of metal frames (very thin) wrapped in cord, it is resistant and at the same time it kinda feels like you float a bit.
Here’s a tip to make your weaving a bit easier.
In your local Walmart or craft store yarn section, purchase the longest size “K/6.50mm” Tunisian or double ended crochet hook you can find.
Once you have your warp (teal cord) completed, use the hook to weave the weft (pink cord) through by the loop end. It will make the process much easier for you.
Thank you for sharing your craft with everyone.
Any crochet hook is useful for this.
@@olenkamoura
Sure. But Tunisian hooks are much longer. I have even made a few for myself & friends, using 1/4” & 1/2” 3 foot crafting dowel rods found in most craft stores. One of those would span the entire width of the chair.
@@Nacho-Mamma Thanks a lot for your explanation 👍👏❤️. 🇧🇷🇧🇷
Awesome tip! Thanks!
Exactly what I was going to suggest!!
This reminds me of a potholder weaving kit that I received as a child. One thing I thought of while watching you do this was that the weaving kit I received, had a long metal hook that you could weave in and out of the weaving to pull in your loops. You could probably make a long hook by using a metal coat hanger. I actually have metal frame chairs that had wicker material on them. The wicker has broken up from the weather and I wanted to keep the chairs but I didn’t know how to repair them. I am not sure I can do this project, but I might give it a try.
Exactly my thought
Yo hice 6.sillones.@capulco... observo que siempre hay para mejorar..nada del otro mundo.... preciosos quedó
This is excellent instruction. I have those exact chairs and just thought today about how to do exactly what you have done. So thrilled to have found your video. Hats off to you. I absolutely cannot believe all the horrible disrespectful comments. Just focus on those of us that truly appreciate the time it took to show us this ❤
Neat tip here, try using a wide toothed comb to push the rows back, speeds up the process. Thank you for the video!
Thank you!
I tried this today and it turned out nicely. Thanks for showing the constrictor knot up close. Definitely had to do that one multiple times. The cost of para cord probably is more than a new chair, but it’s more about the fixing and diverting from landfill part. I used 200 ft for the warp and 100 ft for the weft. FYI.
Wow, sounds like you did a great job! 🙌
I have all the chairs I need, and yet, now I want to go out to the buy back centre and get some of these to weave!
GOOD JOB.
I am from India and I do it in different methods.
VERY NICE
Perfect, absolutely just what I was looking for. I have two very similar chairs where the woven plastic has failed and I didn't want to thrown them away. I couldn't figure out what to use to reweave the seat NOR how to attach it to a metal bar. All the other videos on weaving seats pertain to wooden seats and so attaching the weaving material would be done by tacking it to the wood...obviously that wouldn't work for this seat. Thank you, you've solved the two issues I couldn't figure out. What to use (that would be OK if caught in the rain) and how to attach it to a metal chair. Thumbs up all the way.
same reason im here lol
Me too!
recommended this to my grandma she loves your chair 🤣
Nice. You inspired me to replace and re-weave the webbing of some outdoor chairs I've had for many years. Thanks.
I did a chiar like your, i used two ysrs sticks for the bottom and back. One stick to open the space, the second one to push the paracord through. Thanks for the idea.
I have nearly identical chairs. After 15+years of Colorado weather, they need reweaving.
Thank you
Been looking for something like this for a few months now. So glad I found this video. Very helpful and seems easy enough to follow.
Me too! My neighbor reminded me to go on UA-cam thank God
ua-cam.com/video/o7M9h4VYNKI/v-deo.html
💯👌👌👌🌹
Excellent. Can match different frame with the color of cord. Ignore the salty trolls. That stripped material didn't have a chance in the solar flare generation. I've been looking for this solution for ages.
I did the same to my chairs using rope and I wish i found your video beforehand, i went single strand and it took forever to weave
Glad you did this video. I have a couple of patio chairs that the weather and the dog have taken their toll on. I’ve been wondering about redoing them in paracord so very timely video for me.
I got an old school sun chair I was hoping to fix and look!!!
I'm gonna go for it! Summer here I come! Thanks
Just find 4 of them in the garbage and yes Iam gonna knitter them soon the metal frame is in perfect shape!!! Thanks for the tips!!!
Great. I have ideas now how to replace broken down wicker on my patio metal frame chairs. And match color of awnings! I’ll keep you posted T
It's very easy and simple. Please change weaving method
If you really want to upcycle, use a braided rag rope method, use old clothing pants and shirts (adult) work well or old sheets, any fabric will work. I would suggest to use different types of fabric, colors ect. tshirt rope could work but having tshirt with other more stiffer material would work better. can be very colorful chiar, and much cheaper than having to buy something.
Really helpful. Wish I knew how to estimate the amount of cord needed! We are now refurbishing an old rocking chair and 4 chairs like yours. Great.
Knot description was great.
Oh my it came out so beautiful, I have a patio set and the material got all discolored and broke I am sure it will take me four times as long as you did on every chair but it is worth it. Thank you very much
This feels like a college paper.
Today I will be teaching you something I just learned.
He cord they used in this video cost $80 on Amazon. Not many people spend $80 on a lawn chair.
Just what I was looking for as I have 2 chairs that need refurbishing. Thanks, very helpful.
Cool idea not sure I could do it but it is a fun way to make something look different
Good step to step demonstration. Good workmanship, Thanks for the video, I have learned a new thing today, want to try in on my own hope it works.
Excellent explanation on this! I have started a chair but a little confused on the side weaves 😟 This video definitely has given me the visual I need!!! Thank You so very much!! Now if I can just have a little of your confidence I know I can finish it tomorrow 👍
I have probably done at least a hundred chairs. I still have the first one that is around 30 yrs old. I am always looking for old chairs at garage sales. The macrame store use to have heavyduty frames for sale.
It's worth noting here that a 1000 ft spool of paracord is roughly 50$ US, and one of the chairs destroyed for the demonstration in this video can be bought for anywhere between 25$ to 40$. If you want a new chair, this is not exactly a money-saving endeavour (plus all the time put into it), nor is it a profit-maker (unless working on commission).
However, if you want to invest three days of time and 50$ of materials in a personalized hand-woven chair for yourself and your patio, go for it.
For a slightly thriftier option, 1/8 inch twisted nylon or diamond-braided polypropylene will run you about 30$ for 1000 ft. And slightly thicker cord will decrease the amount required... at some relative cost to comfort.
Please share a link showing that chair for $25, I need a couple.
I was trying to look for some cord at this price and I couldn't find anything for less than 4 times the price ($50 for 1000'). I wonder if it's inflated right now.
And if you live out side of the US where prices are ummm very expensive when it comes to the said used cord when I priced it up it cost $120 just for 500 meters of cord as for the chairs they are around $150-200 for a set so I went to the tip and got a couple there for free and using something a lot cheaper for cord which may or may not last for very long out here in the Outback with the high UV we have here and high temps getting to around 56°c in the height of full summer.
As for the weaving I prefer the 1 to 1 weft cording than the double he was using.
@@dawsie We have this chair for $10-12, or $22-24 for a set of 2 chairs and a metal/glass table. (DK)
...but I have to pay $400 for 500 meters of 4mm paracord.
I used to be absolutely flat broke and even now when I can afford my furniture I about had an aneurysm when he destroyed that brand new pristine chair. Not going to subscribe because I don’t want to end up in the hospital. 🤣 This would be ok for grandma’s old scratchy lawn chair that needs a redo, perhaps.
Your voice is so good to ear 😊
It's not upcycling if you ruin a perfectly good chair for the frame, at best thats hacking it and at worst its stupidly wasteful. Paracord it AFTER a good long life, not before.
Also he’s absolutely terrible at explaining how to weave. You would be better off and learn more by watching hand textile weavers. And if you plan your weave and measure before hand like with certain textile weaves you won’t run out of cord and need to make the unnecessary knots (like in the corners where you could wrap it and hide it in on the underside of the frame in the pink wrap) which could cause weak points and un raveling. Just a thought though.
Oh my gosh, troll much? He is showing how you could reweave a chair. Everyone knows you wouldn't cut up a brand new chair.
WaStEFul. like a green, hippie muppet. what do you care?
@@lesliecaudill725 Leslie, not everybody making a critical comment is a "troll". please grow up.
@@moenibus ha ha. Excellent way to prove a point.
Very cool! Takes a lot of patience!
Thanks! Yeah, we felt really accomplished once we got it done.
😍was just thinking about redoing chairs? A wide toothed comb would be a good tool for pushing back.
My brother has a chair like this and it's falling apart and I want to reweave it for him. Thank you kindly for this video
Nice! I would only repaint the frame in a matching colour to the chords... maybe white.
Good idea!
Expensive but nice end result. Weavers tools would be beneficial for making this easier to do.
Oh Dude, you had me lost on the knots. New chair for me. Great and informative video though.
Yup, that wasn't clear...
you can also use the yard stick to pull the cord back through the weave. just loop it through the hole on the end, or take a piece of scrap and tie a loop on the end and catch your contrast color with that.
My wife found some lawn chairs for me. I started research my options. This is a great option. How many man hours did this take?
Awesome tutorial. I just hope I have enough rope. I have something similar to paracord but a tad wider and flatter.
Just finished a seat for my former vinyl-strap chair. Great tutorial, although I did find my most efficient method was just shoving the active line through the far side of the weave, pushing it up the weave, and then folding over the end of the string and "stitching" between the strands, rather than using this yardstick method. Maybe my weave was too tight but I did give the yardstick a good try before switching. And toward the end, I found it necessary to stitch 2-3 strands or even one at a time and then apply pressure to tighten it, otherwise I couldn't get it straight.
How many feet did you end up using per chair?
@@kategardner5678 I'm really not sure. I have another chair I'll need to do soon so I can try keeping better track of that one. But we have 400ft of black line and at least that much green for the second chair. Figured that should be plenty.
Thanks for tutorial but wondered if I use 4mm cord can I space the down cords a bit further apart like the old plastic I cut away.?
It'd be a little less sturdy, but you could try it! You could also size up the cord diameter to compensate. Here's a link to our size chart: www.paracordplanet.com/paracord-sizes/. Let us know if that helps!
wow man this looks so nice. title should be "how to turn a boring chair into a masterpiece with paracord."
Not familiar with working with this type of cord so I was wondering... When you cut the cord, does it tend to unravel? How do you stop that? Is the cord made of something you could singe with a flame to melt it a little to keep it from unravelling? I would like to try that on a chair I have of a different style (when it gets shabbier of course).
Paracord is a tube of nylon fabric over nylon threads, if you want it to "flatten out" you can pull the white threads out. Easily seal the cut end with heat, just don't catch it on fire!
Sweet I can’t wait to refurbish my patio chairs
Just what I needed, thanks!! 😊
Excelent !!! I loved it. Thanks and kisses from Brazil
You could use that cord to macrame a back and seat on chair too.
Oh, Wow! A good use of macrame.
What the best way to determine how much cord for a project like this
nice. the plastic on these disintegrates, was going to put wooden slats on one
Wow!! It looks great! You did a wonderful job.
How do you estimate how much cord is needed? I have a larger frame to work with...
hello. Love your tutorial and I a planning to try it. How much cord do we need though?
I thought you were silly to use 2 diff colors but it really looks awesome. Great thanks
I think he did that to show how it's done. The cords going across show up better in pink. But it looks good. Makes me wonder if you could do a plaid design with different colors of cord. More knots, I know. More time in the process, but the design would be worth it. I would like to try that.
love it just like carpet weaving what about the arms would look nice too just like the back classy job
Thank you so much for taking your time out to make this video was very informative and not learned a lot thank you
Thank you !
I was just looking for this to re do mine ! ❤
I have a chair and was wondering if it could be done
Can’t add a photo
If you have Facebook, you can direct message the photo to @ParacordPlanet! If not, we can try to help you here in the comments. What kind of chair is it? 🪐
This is brilliant, so glad I found this before chucking my patio chairs! Roughly how long did it take to complete the chair? Thanks for the Vidio 😊
Y como se llama lo que ase la silla
Thank you for sharing best idea.
Just what I was looking for. thank you so much for taking the time to make this video!
Спасибо, Вы меня вдохновили починить мои садовые стулья!
Спасибо за просмотр. Мы рады, что это помогло!
How would you do a round back chair. I have one and it has been a nightmare!
Really cool project, it came out great!
What size of Paracord did you use?? There are so many to choose from: 1/4", 1/2", 5/8", 1/16". Please, let me know what is shown in your video? TY
Hello! This video features 550 Paracord, which is one of the most frequently used sizes among Paracord crafters.
"But first, let's mess up a new chair"😆
Thank you so much for teaching.
Muy buena propuesta!!! Muy prolijo el trabajo,muy buena explicación, gracias, desde Argentina te saludamos
How crazy is that!? I just got three of those exact type chairs for $10! I can’t wait to try this method to reweave them!
I have an egg swing chair that’s made with lace fabric. How can I use paracord to replace the fabric?
Tem três cadeiras de fio vou tentar fazer ao menos uma .
Obrigado pela aula.
De nada! Obrigado por assistir.
how much cord did it end up using? close to the 1,000?
Which is like 100$
I did this and used 300 ft total
A tunisian crochet hook could help weaving. They are LONG crochet books. And you cannot get a large sized hook. The roundness would slide in tight spaces.
Good suggestion, thanks!
Nice tutorial
How to repair it if the cord's been cut or loose !? Thanks
Thank you! I will do this.
Hermoso trabajo alguien me dice que material es hilo o que
Thank you so much, I just got a very old chair round metal like the one you fixed. I do want to do it with rope? can I follow the pattern with different material? this is very awesome, I feel hopeful. I called a mid century store by my neighbor to ask for a restoration place and the store person told me that caning wicking or weaving is very expensive and that the chair was not of worth, I still want to do it!!! a bit on the boho side!?!?!?! Thanksagain!!
You could totally do this with rope! Keep in mind that if you use a natural fiber like cotton, it will degrade more quickly when left outside. The paracord that we use is about 1/8" wide, but you could use thicker or thinner depending on your preference. Natural fibers would look great in the weave used in rush chairs. Alternatively you could use something like a synthetic macramé cord.
So does this work on foldable chairs ? The backs always tear easy
1000 feet of paracord is currently $60-80 depending on the type... Any tips on being able to do for less? Or is it possible to use less paracord, or another kind of material? I have 6 chairs, so the cost will matter. Thanks!
Hi! Wow, that sounds like a fun project. Have you ever used the code "UA-cam" during checkout on paracordplanet.com? Each customer can use it once and get 15% off their order. Let us know if that works for you/helps at all!
You should use a caning needle or steamer from Peerless Rattan. This would make it so much easier.
Ohhh very nice, thank you bro.
Well done!
Great Work💪
Whats the name of the outrosong?
Buna ! Ce fel de ața ai folosit și de unde se poate cumpara ? Merci
Interesting! I've noticed at the beach near me there's always tons of folding chairs thrown out. They usually have torn fabric, but are structurally fine. Is there a way to repair those at all similar to this? It seems like such a waste.
Nice vídeo aula maravilhosa ficou linda está cadeira show de bola parabéns irmão
You can also spray paint the chair before you start to
That would've been cool!
If you use a long Tunisian Crochet hook, you can weave the hook through and then pull the paracord loop back through your "shed." Then beat back with a jumbo plastic comb that fits the paracord through the teeth.
That Was Incredible...
I have the very same chair but what you have to do is way to much work for me... Still, YOU did a great job... 👍
🇹🇷🇹🇷harika oldu elinize sağlık🤲🤲💯
I think it looks great and if you had not seen the cutting of the plastic seat you could have appreciated the artists "new" seat and been encouraged without judgment and misplaced opinion.
Ficou linda! Para ficar maravilhosa eu pintaria as partes de ferro de branco.❤
Thank you for the video What kind of thread were you using?
How many feet of paracord is that spool of turquoise please
Why not push cord back with the yard stick while still inside?
Not a bad idea. If anyone tries this, let us know how it goes!