I've got a punch list of mechanical work that will render the Jeep undriveable for a little while. Before I do that, I want to drive it in the snow. And we haven't had enough snow yet for that.
So I decided to start working on the seats. We had to take sewing class in the 7th grade ("Don't race the machines," our ancient teacher would yell) and got an A- but I haven't touched a sewing machine since. My mom sewed a lot and I have one of her sewing machines. With that and YouTube, I set to work.
I started disassembling the seat that had some upholstery.
I was pleased to find what looks like the original upholstery under the nasty cover. I used that as a pattern.
I've been told upholstery is a lot like sheetmetal work (and I do a lot of sheetmetal work) and I have to agree. I made up some paper patterns the same way I do for a sheetmetal project.
I picked out some dark blue denim from the fabric store. I didn't want to use anything too heavy as I'm learning and wanted something forgiving. I also figure the denim should fade pretty quickly to better fit in with the rest of the Jeep. The denim was $3.97/yard. I bought 2 yards, enough to do both seats and make some mistakes. The fabric people recommended heavy-duty thread, which was $4.95.
My mom is 92 and she was excited to hear I put her machine to use.
Had to do a little ironing, too.
And the first iteration didn't fit. It hung over about 1-1/2" too long at the top.
I learned how to use a seam ripper and adjusted. I tried three different times and I still couldn't get it right.
With frustration winning over progress, I decided to revisit my patterns. The seat is pretty simple, but the curve at the top turned out to be critical. I had sort-of eyeballed that part of the pattern figuring denim is more forgiving than sheetmetal. Turns out it's just as fussy. So I cut some of the stitching out of the original upholstery and got my pattern to match it perfectly.
I started over and cut up new pieces with the more accurate patterns. I also stitched up the top part (the tricky part) first, test fitted each side as I went, and then moved on to the easier parts.
This time it fit.
I'm very happy with it. It will fit a bit tighter when I screw it all in. I'm pretty sure it will be wrinkle-free. I had about six hours in all of this, not including the trip to the fabric store. I probably can do the other back in about an hour.
The bottoms should be about the same, except I don't have a good pattern to go from. I'm looking forward to learning more about stitching!