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Is it worth recovering sofas?

(140 Posts)
specki4eyes Fri 25-May-12 05:28:29

If the sofas are top quality with beech frames, glued,screwed and dowelled plus good quality fillings and padding, yes get them recovered. a good upholsterer will strip them down, make any necessary repairs and re-cover. Don't buy cheap sofas EVER. They are cheap soft wood, stapled together and will survive 5 years tops. "Buy cheap, buy twice".

Multiyork are good and lovely designs.

fieldwake Thu 24-May-12 08:30:51

bags He doesn't have a minute to spare. He works flat our round the clock weekends, eves etc. just to make a living. The government needs to have apprenticeships again. He is 43 and been doing it since 16 and all the upholsterers in the area are older.

fieldwake Thu 24-May-12 08:27:50

Stansgran. He is in Somerset. But has done a beach house suite in deck chair material shipped to California. He has driven Wales, Lincolnshire etc. if the customer is happy to pay for the time and fuel. Most is within 50 miles as he is the only one who can actually do the work. In 15 years of advertising no other experienced upholster has turned up. There is not the apprenticeships now and he certainly has not time or money to train people.

slipcovers Thu 24-May-12 04:00:08

Message deleted by Gransnet.

Bags Sat 05-May-12 06:00:02

fieldwake, why doesn't your son train an apprentice?

pompa Fri 04-May-12 21:01:11

Whilst it can cost as much to re-cover a chair or sofa as a new one, if it is a good quality frame and you find it comfortable, I would have it recovered. We had a pair of Parker Knowle recliners that we had re-covered 3 times, until the mechanisms eventually failed. We then bought a couple of second hand ones and had them re-covered twice. We have never found a chair as comfortable, we now have a pair of Stressless recliners, cost a fortune, but still not as cosy as our old chairs.

whenim64 Fri 04-May-12 14:17:26

I have just bought new memory foam for the seat of a favourite armchair that I only bought from Laura Ashley 5 years ago. It was made to order and has beautiful fabric, but I'm not impressed with it at all. Springs have broken under the seat and the cushioning has gone flat, despite frequent plumping as advised. I'll give it another year and buy another chair, but not from Laura Ashley.

Stansgran Fri 04-May-12 14:04:10

fieldwake Please just give a hint what area he is in?

fieldwake Fri 04-May-12 13:29:45

My son is an upholster of 27 years. If your furniture is good quality and you like it, it is worth reupholstering and all the little extra jobs that go with it in a fabric and materials of your choice. (Any cheap furniture isn't) but it costs only a bit more to have one made from scratch. He makes the frames from beech etc to your size ie: if you are tall/short or one of you is tall the other short etc and all the other made to measure features, high/low back etc. etc. He is stacked out with work as his sort are a dying breed with no apprencticeships now..........

agapanthus Sun 26-Feb-12 17:46:25

Thanks for your advice everyone.

harrigran Sun 26-Feb-12 11:58:48

If you have a good sofa that was British made, stick with it and reupholster. So many pieces of furniture are poorly made now, I have thrown out M&S furniture as it was so poorly made. My latest suite is Alstons and on examination appears well made but time will tell. I don't have cats but GC can wreak havoc too.

kittylester Sun 26-Feb-12 10:55:58

We spent a fortune on a three piece suite in 1976 (about £400 shock) having spent quite a bit of money buying daft sofas etc.

In about 1986, we had one of the chairs 'extended' and made into a three seater sofa to go with the 4 seater and had them both reupholstered and recovered. We had the two sofa recovered in 1991 and will have them redone again before too long.

We took the remaining, original, chair (still covered in green William Morris) to the dump yesterday as we really have nowhere for it to go now and the quote to reupholster it was £500. I felt quite tearful.

The reason we have continued to have it redone is simply because we know it is well made and is really comfortable.

On the cat issue (!!) - Lakeland do some really good protectors for sofa corners (our cats' favourite place for scratching despite various, very expensive, scratching posts!) and tey seem to be working. We bought a spray once and treated a new sofa for the upstairs sitting room which lost all it's colour in all the places we sprayed.

absentgrana Sun 26-Feb-12 09:56:48

artygran has hit the nail on the head. A lot of modern furniture is very poor quality and simply not worth trying to revive or, indeed, buying in the first place. However, your sofas sound as if rejuvenation would be a sound investment. I would do the same with mine, which are well made, but five cats can demolish new covers in 5 minutes.

artygran Sat 25-Feb-12 19:03:17

If your sofas have well made frames, which I suspect they do, I would get a good upholsterer in and ask for his advice. If he is worth his salt, he will be able to offer you plenty of choice of fabrics and fillings and some of them will even carry out remodelling if you want it. Most of the furniture you buy these days has been made in China and have frames that look as if they have been put together in a 1st year woodwork class. We inherited a suite that came originally from Harrods. It had a hand-built frame and we had it reupholstered, with new feather fillings in the back cushions and new filling in the seat cushions, and it was worth every penny. I wish we still had it. We only parted with it because it was too big for the house we moved to, and we bought G Plan sofas to replace it, which were good, but nowhere near the same quality. If you decide to buy new, get the best frame and springing you can find. If they can't tell you anything about either, walk out of the shop!

agapanthus Sat 25-Feb-12 16:55:30

Hi! I'm new to this so here goes.
We desparately need new loose covers on our two sofas , which are about 10 years old , but one of them has a 'saggy' seat (because its in a fav position), and the feather cushions on the back are droopy. They were Collins and Hayes . I was going to get a quote for new covers ,but apart from the environmental issue I wonder if it will be worth it financially. Any views or similar expeiences please?