1800s Platform Glider Restoration

by Brandon Smith in Workshop > Furniture

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1800s Platform Glider Restoration

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This is an 1800s Platform Glider. As you can see it is in quite a bit of distress. The owner contacted me before purchasing it for $50 and asked if I could salvage it. I naturally did not shy away as my business has been doing furniture restoration and refinishing for approx. 4 years. Let's tear this bad boy apart shall we?

Upholstery Removal

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First step was to get that nasty upholstery off of there and old padding. It had a ton of water damage and all needed discarded before a replacement could be added. This was done with a tack puller and needle nose pliers.

Disassembly

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The smart thing to do is disassemble as much of a piece of furniture as possible before refinishing. Normally we will completely disassemble but due to the age of this piece, if the glue was still holding strong, we do not want to mess with the integrity of the piece. At this time we also made any repairs that were necessary such as loose spindles/dowels by pulling them and reinstalling with fresh wood glue.

Sand Time

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Spindle Sanding 1800s Platform Glider

Before sanding we had to address the grain that had separated quite a bit due to the elements. What we did was rub all affected areas in stainable wood filler. Then entire wood portion of the glider needed sanded down before its new stain could be applied. Spindle sanding is done with an orbital, Dremel, and for the spindles we used sandpaper backed with duct tape torn into thin strips to get the tight areas sanded of previous finish.

Stain/Polycrylic Time

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The client wanted to keep the older style furniture look so we went with a Sherwin Williams Chestnut stain that really made all the wood grain and aged detail that we kept pop. Hand wiped on with a lint free rag.Then shot with 5 coats of Minwax Polycrylic sanding between each coat with 220 grit sandpaper.

Assembly/Reupholstery

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We reassembled and reupholstered using a 2" foam pad on top of the original springs and twine and covered with this beautiful diamond print red velvet fabric by pneumatic stapling around the exterior. Be sure to make sure your fabric pattern makes sense before tacking down!

Install Decorative Tack Strip

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Finally we covered our staple trail with a decorative tack strip. Most seat upholstery now days is done where fabric wraps around to the underneath of a board and is tacked. We were unable to do this with chair and needed a way to hide the staple trail. The original upholstery had a piping that was placed over top but we wanted to go a more decorative route. I think this way cleaned up the glider quite nicely. What do you folks think? Amazing Transformation right?