When Ryan and I were first married, my parents spent a weekend at my grandparents house getting rid of some clutter. One of the items that was on its way out was an old dining room table and chairs that originally belonged to my great grandparents.
Thankfully, my mom couldn’t bear to see them go. So, she called me! Yay!
I’m always up for a little DIY challenge and Ryan and I just so happened to be shopping for our first house. Perfect!
Mom saved the set from the landfill, Ryan and I bought a house, and the set was ours. We lovingly refinished the chairs with dark cherry stain and I re-covered the seats with a tone-on-tone red damask fabric. Gorgeous! We ended up having to buy a new table because the tabletop wasn’t salvageable (good news, we did save and reuse the legs).
Every time my parents come over for dinner, my Dad remarks fondly how glad he is that we saved the chairs. He remembers the “heart” shape backs from his own childhood. My grandmother has also been tickled to see them in our house. I love the history and stories these chairs tell. All the warm fuzzy feelings!
Now we have three little ones of our own and the stories continue. Sadly though, the red damask hasn’t loved the spilled oatmeal, applesauce, milk, ice cream, yogurt, syrup… you name it, those chairs have gotten doused in it.
I was wandering around Hobby Lobby looking for inspiration, and this is what called my name!
The chairs! Yes!
Materials:
1 yard home decor fabric (Mine was from Hobby Lobby)
6, 1″ foam chair pads (Hobby Lobby again), measuring 15″ x 17″
Tissue paper
Staple gun, staples
Pliers and screw driver (for removing old staples)
Directions:
- I started by removing the seats from the chairs. (Let’s be real, Ryan did that part. Thanks babe!)
- I used a combination of the flathead screwdriver and pliers to remove the old staples.
- I traced the seats out into the tissue paper and then added about 2.5″ all the way around to create a pattern. If you look closely (not only will you see my stylish slippers) you will also see my grandfather’s last name and my grandmother’s maiden name written on the back from when my grandparents were first married and had the chairs recovered. Family history right there!

- Then I used my pattern to cut out my fabric. I also had to trim the chair foam just a bit to fit the seats.
- Assembling the seats is as simple as fabric face down, foam centered on the fabric, seat (face down) on top. Then staple, staple, and staple some more. To staple, you want to pull the fabric tight, actually pressing down on the foam. Start in the center of one side, and work to the edges, leaving the corners until all four sides are done. Do the corners last, making a nicely finished edge.
- Ryan put the screws back in and… voila!
Chairs full of legit family history sans oatmeal stains!
-h
P.S. Check out my cute little helper…