Prior to purchasing the stools, I inspected them and made sure that the seats detached easily so that I could recover the cushions myself. I love neutral colored furniture with easy-to-recover cushions because then you can change them out multiple times depending on where you're using the piece. The other thing I noticed is that they were DIRTY!
I took them home, attacked them with my screw gun, removed the seats and scrubbed them within an inch of their life. These were obviously used in the kitchen and rarely wiped down. There was enough food on them to stick small children to the seats permanently. Ice cream had dripped down the legs and jam was petrified under the armrests. I also had to scrub the seats and let them dry overnight because the leftovers would have attracted ants if I had just put my new fabric over them.
When you re-do garage sale finds, you have to be okay with vintage finishes. No matter how hard you try, there will be signs of wear that can't be erased. Although my plan is to repaint the iron, a lot of finish had been rubbed off and I wasn't sure how well the paint would adhere in the long run. Also, we had to try several finishes to find a stain that would adhere to the back of the stools where the stain had been rubbed off, so it's not perfect and I'm okay with that.
The final step was to recover the seats with my new fabric and my trusty staple gun. A few screws and the seats were back in place.
This project took about nine hours to complete with a final pricetag of $121. The fabric cost $9.20 for 2 yards and it took two cans of flat black spray paint. I used stain that I already owned and I have about 1/2 yard of fabric and 1/2 can of spray paint leftover to use on another project.
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