Tiki Central / Tiki Carving
Restoring vintage rattan chairs and need some help.
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8T
8FT Tiki
Posted
posted
on
Tue, Jul 6, 2004 1:48 PM
Hi. I have some vintage "Tropitan" chairs and some other rattan pieces that I am trying to spruce up. I only need to find a source for the ribbed plastic wrap that was used for concealing the joints. It becomes brittle over the years and breaks off in strips or just cracks. It is usually a tan or deep cream color but I also have black on a dining set. It is about 1 1/2 to 2 inches in width and has either 3 or 4 ribs. I suppose you can get it on a roll or by the foot ? I have searched the web and found nothing!! Surely someone still makes this stuff! I gotta believe that there are several of you clever TC'ers who have done this type of repair or at least know exactly what material I am looking for. It may be that it is readily available in a coastal area but not here in my mid-west pastureland. Save the Tikis! [ Edited by: 8FT Tiki on 2004-07-06 14:06 ] |
B
Biotron2000
Posted
posted
on
Tue, Jul 6, 2004 3:14 PM
8FT, |
K
kctiki
Posted
posted
on
Tue, Jul 6, 2004 7:48 PM
I looked through the catalog for Frank's Cane & Rush Supply (the company I got a Rattan re-wrapping kit from). Under "Plastic Wicker Supplies" they list "Flat Oval Plastic" that is 1/4" wide & comes in green, brown & white. The catalog says it could be used for wrapping, amoung other things. Not exactly what your looking for, but maybe would work. The rattan re-wrapping kit comes with an instuction sheet for wrapping rattan furniture. Or maybe they could direct you to a source for the exact item you need. The website is franksupply.com |
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Traderpup
Posted
posted
on
Mon, Nov 7, 2005 5:20 PM
I never really cared for that fake vinyl caning that binds some rattan furniture, so I learned how to replace it with real caning. I've been practicing some re-caning of old rattan furniture I track down at flea markets... I'm starting to get halfway good at it.... Here's a picture of a chair corner before caning: and after caning: It isn't that difficult. The hardest part is learning the fancy wrap & weave patterns. |
Pages: 1 3 replies