Repair Pulls in Upholstery Instantly

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Intro: Repair Pulls in Upholstery Instantly

A maker’s/tinkerer’s/artist’s back pocket, such as mine, hosts many different objects (not all of which are conducive to being placed in a pocket ). This means that often, things that are not appropriately pocket sized, such as: tools, strange found objects, utensils, living things, etc., stick out quite aggressively. This in and of itself is not problematic when standing; however, when seated, these objects can lead to a myriad of malaises, from sciatic pain to the impetus for authoring this article —pulls in upholstery

“Hypothetical” scenario: 

Average mid-spring day, searing sun, brisk air, and a denim back pocket desperately clutching a pair of needle nosed pliers as I contorted my body into the passenger seat of my wife's beloved subcompact hatchback. Much to the chagrin of the passenger seat, the plier’s careless ragged teeth gnawed at its upholstery as I backed into it blindly. An attempt to pass off the tight weave’s very audible evisceration as a much ruder sound from an entirely different source was futile. The damage was done. What follows is how simple it is to reverse the damage to upholstery with the right tool not intended for the job. 

ATTENTION CAT OWNERS: This guide might in fact be more for you than anyone else. 

STEP 1: What Is a Felting Needle?

Felting needles for the uninitiated, are specialty needles designed for felting a bundle of fibers (habitually wool) through repeated insertion and removal (STABBING). These needles have tiny forward-facing barbs that hook the fibers together as the needle is repeatedly inserted into the bundle of fibers, matting them together. If you’ve never taken a stab at needle felting, I implore you to try, it is oddly therapeutic, humbling, and the results are often rewarding.

STEP 2: The Repair Technique


My limited needle felting experience led me to hypothesize a potential solution to pulls in upholstery (after the passenger seat disaster of 2020). After grueling minutes of research and development, the theory was tested and worked spectacularly! In fact, it worked so well that I started creating pulls in upholstery just to mend them like a fabric wizard. 

The Repair Technique In Detail:

Here is the simple technique to reverse the effects of nearly all small pulls in upholstery! 

Preparatory Step: Grasp the felting needle around its shaft, close to the bent end, in your dominant hand between your thumb and index. Use remaining fingers to help support the needle. You are now ready.

Step 1: With the felting needle, point down, gingerly stab around the affected area to tighten up the loosened fibers. 

Step 2: Stab the loop of the pull directly until it becomes recessed back into the fabric. 

Step 3: Tidy up any stray fibers by stabbing them as well. 

Step 4: Rub the previously affected area with your fingertips in disbelief. 

Step 5: Share the technique with your cat owning friends. 


STEP 3: Bonus.


For the overly ambitious, you can even convert a pumpkin carving reciprocating saw into an automated needle felting machine! Yes, it is terrifying to use, but it's guaranteed to increase speed of repair by at least 65% until the felting needle breaks!    

7 Comments

Thanks for sharing this with us. It's so interesting and informative.

Wow! Very simple in design and yet quite effective! I feel like this solution will greatly help me repair all the cat scratches I have on my furniture. Depending on the size of the hole and the material of the damaged furnishings, you might be able to use yarn of the same colour to patch up a larger hole with felting. The converted pumpkin carving tool is an amazing idea, and it deserves its own instructable!

Hey LondonThunder!

Thanks! Adding yarn is a great suggestion for larger tears/pulls! Using a contrasting colour kintsugi-style would be rad too in the right context! As for the converted pumpkin carver...not sure I feel comfortable with the thought of sharing how to make your own as it is TERRIFYING to use.

Cheers!

Mr. Ham

Great idea! Maybe I can stop yelling at the cat now. I have used a small crochet hook to pull a yarn pull to the reverse side of a sweater, but never thought of using a felting needle. Thanks for being so inventive!

Hey rozzieozzie!

Thanks! I've never used a crochet hook to fix a sweater so touché! Thanks for sharing your hack!

Cheers!

Mr. Ham

Entertaining and informative! It’s a shame your noise-diversion attempt failed, but science moves forward through these sorts of blunders and now thanks to you I can too! This discovery saved one car, but too bad this doesn’t work on leather…

Hey jiovanie!

Thanks! I'm convinced the noise-diversion will work eventually and hopefully in the reverse order! AND I was thinking the exact same thing when I was doing it, unfortunately I haven't figured out a quick leather fix yet. I usually just baseball stitch rips in leather, but I'd love to find a more accessible repair solution to share.

Cheers!

Mr. Ham