Sunday, September 18, 2011

Trash to Treasure-My New Family Size Ottoman!

I have been admiring large ottoman's for quite some time, but didn't want to spend the $800-900 price for a large enough ottoman for my family.  I also wasn't quite sure if it was a piece I really would love to use once I had it.  So I decided to make my own!  Here's my haul from Big Y Yardage in Orange.  This store is great and everyone who works here is so helpful!





I had a farmhouse table that was old and beat up from being outside but was in good enough shape for this project!

Here is a list of the supplies purchased:

Silver Velvet Remnant $3.95
Antique Satin Remnant $2.00
Pewter Gray Gimp $7.80
3" High Density Foam 30"x48" $78.00  (If you can find a piece of foam in some throwaway furniture, always save it, foam is $$$$ and the price continues to increase since it is a petroleum based product.)
Batting  2 yards $16.00
Primer Spray Paint $3.99
Krylon Pewter Gray Spray Paint $4.99
Button Cover Kit $2.50

Tools Used:

Staple Gun
Glue Gun
Hand Saw
Sand Paper
Gorilla Glue

Here's what I did:

Step 1: Sawed off the legs of the table to shorten it.  I am going with a total height right now of 18 inches.  I'm short, so this is a good height to sit on or put my feet up on, but I'm also not sure if I'm going to add casters to the bottom of the piece.  I'm thinking locking casters would be awesome so I can move it easily to sweep, etc. but I'm going to hold off on that for now.

Step 2: Primed and Painted exposed surfaces only.

Step 3: Spread Gorilla glue on top of table and stuck the upholstery foam on.  Now, I'm not sure this is a necessary step, but I didn't want the foam to slide or move while I was upholstering.

Step 4: Covered the foam with a layer of batting and trimmed it to hang just to the edge of the upholstery.  The foam alone would have been okay, but the batting softened up the edge of table.  That way if I run into it, I won't bruise my shins through the upholstery.

Step 5: Covered the batting with the antique satin remnant.  Muslin or any other fabric would work, but the upholstery store had a perfect neutral remnant for $2.00 that was extra wide, which I needed.

Step 6: Starting in the middle of each side, stapled the fabric all around, tucking the corners like a present.  I was sure to draw each piece taut and smooth, worked well.  I almost stopped with just the satin because it looked great.

Step 7: Repeated Step 5&6 with the velvet.

Step 8: Glued gimp on using hot glue and burned my palm, yeah!

Step 9: Cut circles out of the velvet and using a button cover kit made buttons. Note, the velvet was too thick for the little button cover kit teeth to grab so I hot glued it together and it worked just fine.  No one is looking at the bottom of my buttons anyway.

Step 10: Hot glue the buttons you made in Step 9 to the corners and voila, done!  It's shiny and shimmery, super comfy and we'll see if I decide to add those castors.




5 comments:

  1. Beautiful job! Thanks for sharing :).

    ~Morgan
    PepperDesignBlog.com

    ReplyDelete
  2. Why can I not seem the ottoman? All that comes up is a large grey screen of the !( explanation point). It gives me five small explanation points at the bottom of the page to pick from, but will not show any pictures of the ottoman. So sad I wanted to see the finished product. I am wanting to do two half moon ottomans instead of just one. I am so disappointed. Is there any way you could send me a finished picture of the ottoman on my email address? If that is not asking to much. Thanks in advance for all that you share. I love everything....
    patty b. pbruce9581@charter.net

    ReplyDelete
  3. Me too!
    Would really like to have a little view at the ottoman - but the pics are not visible :(

    ReplyDelete
  4. Seems this blog isn't in use anymore? Lastest posting is by Dec. 2012 and this ottoman entry was written
    Sunday, September 18, 2011. Somewhere lost... so sad!

    ReplyDelete