apartment therapy changing the world, one room at a time


NY Good Questions: Inexpensive Reupholsterer?

12.10chair.jpgHello AT,

Walking down the street in Brooklyn this evening, we stumbled upon this lone chair sitting out in the frigid cold next to some old abstract paint canvases.

My girlfriend recognized it immediately as an Eames, though we figured it was probably a knock-off.

When we got home, however, we turned it upside down and were astonished to realize that it's an authentic Herman Miller (with a patent number and everything)...

 
 
(Note: Include a pic of your problem and your question gets posted first.)

12.10chair3.jpg

It has clearly seen some use and the fabric seems to have been scrawled on by the previous owner's kid (albeit in a similar, brownish color!).

12.10chair5.jpg

But I'm curious about having it reupholstered, and what that might cost.

Also, it needs a new foot piece for one of the feet, so I'm wondering about parts.

Thanks! Blake

Tags

Good Questions

Related Links

Share

Comments (21)

Blake, try getting in touch with Retro Redo. They charge about $250 to reupholster an Eames shell chair, and are willing to work on most Herman Miller and Knoll pieces. Very nice people, and will be happy to give you a quote if you email them. I'm planning to send a shell out there in the new year.

As for the foot piece, try getting in touch with Highbrow Furniture. They sell replacement parts for most HM pieces still in production (as this one is).

(Very nice find, BTW!)

posted by Anna at D16 on December 10th 2007 at 10:57am
view Anna at D16's profile

I was under the impression that style of chair actually was a pre-made cushion (that you order), versus a true upholstery job, but I may be mistaken.

posted by patrick (the other one) on December 10th 2007 at 11:12am
view patrick (the other one)'s profile

Excellent! I had the same question, as I am redoing the room mne is in, and would love to have it in a different color.

posted by lalaklass on December 10th 2007 at 11:19am
view lalaklass's profile

Anna - Thank you! Highbrow Furniture looks like the perfect source for that foot.

Patrick - Now that you say it, it makes sense: when I turned the chair upside down I noticed that the whole seat is kind of a "sling" hung on the frame. Maybe it's as easy as ordering a new cushion from Highbrow Furniture? I wonder how easy it would be to mount on the frame.

posted by Blake NY on December 10th 2007 at 11:21am
view Blake NY's profile

How lucky are you?! I have a vintage herman miller as well, and when first got it, the metal was a bit tarnished. I used some metal polish and it worked wonders. I highly recommend it. Congrats on your find!

posted by petro on December 10th 2007 at 11:25am
view petro's profile

I jealous

posted by tattfoo on December 10th 2007 at 12:10pm
view tattfoo's profile

I think that if you unscrew the bits on the back/top, the fabric "sling" can be removed & replaced. A decorator I have worked with has had these reupholstered before.

We got the same chair free, and are also missing a foot. Ours is actually broken off and part of the plastic thing is stuck up in the screw hole it goes into.

Any thoughts on how to get that bit out, should a replacement foot be found?

posted by christinanyc on December 10th 2007 at 12:11pm
view christinanyc's profile

We have these exact chairs in our conference rooms at work. Love them!

posted by Amandica on December 10th 2007 at 12:21pm
view Amandica's profile

I hate that when the plastic thing is stuck up in the screw hole.

posted by patrick (the other one) on December 10th 2007 at 12:29pm
view patrick (the other one)'s profile

cristinanyc: very carefully, with a tiny drillbit, at slow speeds, drill into the center of the plastic. Done right, leaving the bit in place, put the drill in reverse and slowly, while pulling gently, the plastic should spin out with the bit. If not, then change up to a slightly larger bit, enlarging the hole, repeat, etc. You should be able able to get the plastic out fairly easily at that point. This is how I remove bolts and screws that have their heads snapped off or stripped....

posted by Justin (the first one) on December 10th 2007 at 12:30pm
view Justin (the first one)'s profile

Petro- can you tell me exactly what type of metal polish you used for the aluminum? Thank you!

posted by irksomecushion on December 10th 2007 at 12:47pm
view irksomecushion's profile

Lucky you!!

posted by lindsey kathlene on December 10th 2007 at 1:00pm
view lindsey kathlene's profile

Congratulations on a great find!

Is anyone else wondering about those 'abstract paint canvases' [sic]?

posted by rattus on December 10th 2007 at 1:02pm
view rattus's profile

nice find- these guys might be able to help out with replacement parts - they're in uk but they have a ton of parts for herman miller chairshttp://www.mancha.demon.co.uk/spares.html

posted by JeffK on December 10th 2007 at 2:58pm
view JeffK's profile

Why not call Herman Miller first, before you look elsewhere? Their warranty/service is excellent. They came to our home -- for free -- to repair my husband's chair, which he bought 6 years ago.

posted by Lisa Hunter on December 10th 2007 at 3:30pm
view Lisa Hunter's profile

The polish I used is called Brasso. You can get it at most supermarkets and hardware stores.

posted by petro on December 10th 2007 at 6:02pm
view petro's profile

Dammit. The odds are against me of ever stumbling on anything like vintage Herman Miller out by the trash here in Lincoln, Nebraska.

Oh, wait. There was that solid brass Paavo Tynell light fixture that I bought for a quarter at a tag sale. And that Eliot Noyes IBM telephone table I got at an auction for seven bucks. And I guess I did get that Hans Wegner Papa Bear Chair at that one estate sale...

But I really want an Eames chair for my office.

posted by Bruised on December 10th 2007 at 8:37pm
view Bruised's profile

I caught that, Patrick ;)

posted by Shannon on December 11th 2007 at 3:55am
view Shannon's profile

Parts are also available from Hume Modern-- humemodern.com. Alfie Hume specializes in Herman Miller furniture restoration and repair. He also has some used parts--I got some great casters for a chair, also some glides for my chairs. He will also know about the upholstery possibilities with this chair--. I have a similar chair, so I look forward to hearing about what you do with it in terms of that upholstery.

posted by deb52 on December 11th 2007 at 10:46am
view deb52's profile

Hi All

I ended up contacting Lloyd at Retro Redo about the reupholstering, and Highbrow Furniture about a replacement foot. Highbrow sent the little plastic foot free of charge--incredibly generous.

Retro Redo quoted the reupholstering of this particular model at $350 plus shipping, and also said that this is one of the more expensive ones to redo. I'm saving up the cash to mail it down to them sometime soon.

In the meantime, a little polish and a new foot, and she's looking pretty good.

posted by Blake NY on January 16th 2008 at 1:22pm
view Blake NY's profile

Blake, did you ever end up getting this reupholstered? Thinking about getting mine done.

Andy - Brooklyn

posted by andyhatch on July 3rd 2009 at 5:19pm
view andyhatch's profile

Feeds

RSS icon New York

+ City Feeds