This post is about how to recover a nursery glider.
Ever since we moved into our house almost a month ago and painted baby M’s nursery, I have been piecing together in my brain items we needed to complete the space. One item that has always been on this list was a glider/rocker and ottoman. The problem with this is that they range in price (for a decent one) from about $250-$450. Already having to spend so much money to get ready for baby, this thought did not make me happy, so I had been putting off the purchase. Then, a couple weeks ago I was browsing a local consignment shop and got a bad cramp in my foot. I immediately was looking for a place to sit down and this glider was right where I was standing.
Related: Get 20% off a single item at Buy Buy Baby
So, I sat, and while wincing in pain from my cramp, began to rock and realized hey, this is pretty comfortable! I looked at the price tag….$89 for the chair AND ottoman! Yes, please! I took a picture and sent it to Bobby, and he agreed it was a good buy, so it came home with me. Now, I have no idea who owned said glider before me, nor did I want to sit in their baby vomit, so I decided to recover the chair. (Those that know me and my lack of crafty-ness may laugh hysterically now). I started where else, but Pinterest, and found LOTS of cute ideas….but most of them involved a sewing machine, creating armrests, adding batting, among other things well above my skill level. I quickly changed my search to “how to recover a nursery glider with no sewing” and found a few options such as adding velcro and hot glue, using iron and stick on tape….still a little “eh” on wanting to do something like that for a chair most people will never see. So, I decided to just wing it, and headed to the craft store for some fabric and….something to get it onto the chair, at that point I wasn’t sure what. I came home with two colors of fabric, some VELCRO Brand – Sticky Back Tape and some Uncarded Liquid Stitch, 4-Ounce
…still with no idea how I was going to pull this off and recover a nursery glider.
Yall, I’m going to give you a warning right now. If you are a crafty person, you may want to stop reading. If the thought of someone not doing something the “right way” makes you want to twitch, you are NOT going to want to read about how I completed this project. I get it, you are very talented in this area and roll your eyes at people like me, and that is fine! I just want to warn you to divert your eyes, or you may end up at my house fixing my chair for me because you just can’t sleep at night.
I started by laying out the fabric and putting the back and bottom cushion on it to see how much I had. Well, I thought I was going to have enough to completely cover the front and back, but I misjudged. Never fear, who is going to see the back anyway? I would make do.
Apparently Sassy thought it would be a nice place for a nap. I began folding the corners over and started using safety pins to pull it tight, and figured I would come back later with the velcro or SOMETHING to make it look more professional (haha). Below is what the back cushion looked like after I safety pinned it all the way around.
I did the same with the bottom cushion, then decided to come back to this part later and then moved on to the ottoman. This was a little bit trickier because the fabric was stapled down all around the bottom. I thought about doing the same, but don’t have a staple gun. I did however have a new tube of liquid stitch, so I thought I would give it a go. I basically wrapped the edges like a present and ran a line of the glue all the way around, and for added support used safety pins on the four corners as well.
It looks a total mess underneath but I think from the top you can’t tell and it came out nice!
When I finished that part, I decided to put the cushions on the chair and place the ottoman “just to see how it looked”. Well….my safety-pinned cushions didn’t look half bad! Does it look awesome? Absolutely not, but for its purposes and my skill set, it looked ok by me. I decided to just leave the safety pins in the cushions and not do anything else to it. That way, if I ever wanted to take the fabric off or change it, it would be fairly simple.
So…I give you, my safety-pinned glider and liquid stitch ottoman!
So for anyone who is like me, who wants to recover a nursery glider but has no idea how to do it in a simple, non-sewing way, remember there is hope! It may not be the prettiest or hold up the longest, but I think it looks better than it did before, and I don’t think baby M will mind it one bit.
Related: Free shipping on rugs for your nursery (or any room!) from Rugs USA
QOTD: are you crafty? Have you ever tried to “wing” an art project
Disclosure: Post may contain affiliate links
Jen says
You did such a great job! As a fellow non-crafty person, I’m super impressed!
CARLA says
We tried this when we our daughter was tiny.
It did NOT look as nice as yours!!!
Heather says
it was a lot harder than I anticipated!
Mindy @ Road Runner Girl says
It looks awesome!!!! I am so not crafty! I find the idea and then I hand it over to my crafty mother in law or sister in law to do for me! 😉
Lindsay @ The Lean Green Bean says
love it! way to be resourceful. we’ve been thinking about recovering ours but have been too lazy. i might tackle the footstool at least for a fun pop of color!
Heather says
The lazy is exactly why it was done this way haha
Jen says
I love this! I’ve been researching how to do the exact same thing to our glider. I know how to sew but not super well so I might have to try your methods instead! On a side note, we’re doing the same color scheme for our girl on the way!
Heather says
I think maybe if I wasn’t so far along in my pregnancy I would have had a little more patience or gotten help from my mom who can sew bbbuuttt…at this point I jsut didn’t care!
Lesley says
It looks great! I’m not crafty one bit and may not even have attempted something like this.
Heather says
if you saw how ugly the fabric was close up originally you may have haha
Erin @ Her Heartland Soul says
I am not craft AT ALL. I wish I was!
Lauren @ Lauren's Glass Slipper says
That looks awesome!! Love the colors!
Nicole Glass says
We got a very similar chair from a shop near our house and I ended up buying a new pad online (it ties on) and little extra fabric and husband added more padding and covered the ottoman. I have zero craftiness skills so I am super lucky to have him. He painted and did everything for the baby’s room!
Heather says
my husband is sadly even less crafty than me!
Ashley says
Haha I love it! We used a staple gun to redo that dining set I had on my Facebook, seriously simple may not looks amazing crafter quality but it still looks awesome! I think it is super awesome, and love your fabric choices!
Heather says
thanks!
Carrie says
I love this and figure it’s exactly how I’ll do mine as well! Question…after sitting in it over and over, have you found it popped any of your liquid stitches? I keep picturing throwing myself into the chair and ripping the entire back down with my weight lol
Heather says
I only did liquid stitch on the ottoman, I used safety pins on the chair cushions 😉
Alisa says
Can you tell me how the pin-job held up over time? As you sat on it time after time, month after month, how did it look? Thanks!
Heather says
Held up just fine! I will be honest though and say we don’t use the rocker much anymore though bc baby girl doesn’t care to be rocked!
Krystal says
Freaking genius!
Heather says
thanks!
Elizabeth says
You are my, “I have no clue what I’m doing” inspiration for my glider revamp tonight. Fabric and staples in hand. Non crafty fingers crossed.
Heather says
You can do it! No one will see the staples!