But it is all good now.
Almost.
First, I had to travel to Italy this summer. I packed all the chosen fabric from Thailand into my suitcase. Before arriving in Calabria we stopped in Venice for a wedding. Then, I repacked the suitcase. The fabric continued the journey by car, while I travelled by air. Reunited in Pizzo, I entered the house - the sofa was gone! But that is another story that I prefer to skip.
It is all good now.
Almost.
The craftsman who was introduced to us had a look at the furniture and the fabric. We explained what we want, he made a proposal, and we agreed. Since it was summer, the craftsmen would need longer than 10 days for the work. We were awaiting guests and did not want to miss dining chairs. Therefore, we decided to have them, the sofa, and the armchair picked up after the holiday peak Feragosto (August 15). When everyone and everything goes back to normal.
One day after summer, we were long gone back to Asia, our order was ready and delivered - or picked up - from the tiny upholstery workshop in the heart of Pizzo. My father-in-law made some snap shots and mailed the result to us.
From what I see, the sofa looks good.
The armchair looks wrong.
The dining chairs look okay.
What do you think?
AFTER: calm grey fabric enhances carved sofa frame
BEFORE: the "tiger sofa" and it's story
For the sofa, there was a big surprise: I never saw the back! I did not know we would need fabric for the back too! I am very glad, I bought some spare fabric.
always have some spare fabric for surprises
From what I heard, my mother-in-law did not like at all the new upholstery for the armchair. She "discussed" with the craftsman - got a chair for free - and asked me to buy more fabric, in order to redo the seating cushion.
AFTER: the armchair - something looks wrong
BEFORE: it looked promising
BEFORE: the real before with gold lacquer
(previous pic is a 2nd chair that needed more work)
Apparently, I was not clear enough about the fabric direction for the armchair, as well as for the dining chairs. One chair had even a similar fabric and the fine stripes ran from front to back - and not from left to right. But who knows why the craftsman changed direction.
Now, our 7 dining chairs of three styles have something in common: a dark finish and a bluish upholstery.
AFTER: dining chair
BEFORE: backrest broken, fabric riven
BEFORE: unstable and rotten fabric
BEFORE: unstable and broken backrest
(fabric runs in the right direction!)
AFTER: all new! (sorry for blur photo)
Lessons learned:
- Always buy more fabric than you need! Miscalculation or mishap may happen.
- Explain your idea clearly! Direction of fabric, border, nails, finish tone or colour for wood - don't leave room for unexpected creativity.
- Be sure about the finishing before choosing the fabric (silver seems not the right choice for our armchair)
Maybe, I should think about a DIY upholstery project next time? I researched some books about upholstery and think, this might be a good introduction:
A final remark and last photo:
AFTER: new upholstery with good vibes
Does anyone see the spots in the above photo? Not the spots on the wall. The two circles, below the light switch. I would have said, Angelo's camera has spots on the lens again. My friend says, these orbs are a sign for good energy in the room. Wow, my new upholstery has a great energy boost then!
Photos: Angelo and Palazzo Pizzo
Lovely redo Suzie!! Orbs and all most successful. I have missed visiting your enchanting world. Wishing you all happiness for the holidays. Venice and Budapest were quite magical. Carol
ReplyDeleteDear Carlo,
Deletesame to you, happy holidays and all the best for a lucky 2013! I wonder if you will publish photos of Venice and Budapest on your lovely blog?
suzie
good example of how fabric can change everything. Always love before and afters.
ReplyDeleteAll the best,
Yvalie
Yes, me too, before and after are often so amazing. However, sometimes I wouldn't mind a "before". And wonder how many people would prefere the tiger sofa above the "boring" grey ;-) but you always need to see the context the furniture is in and then it explains the "after".
Delete