Ever have an idea that in theory was great but in practice didn’t work out as planned?
That’s what happened with our couch. Two years ago, sick of having no couch in our home, Mike turned a wooden shoe box he’d built into a couch, by first turning it into a bench, then I added cushioning and a cover to make it be a couch.
The problem with it was that the shoe box was built as that, not planning to be a couch, and so, the seat wasn’t wide enough. As a bench it was fine, but when we put the cushions on the bench and the back, it used up much of the available sitting space, leaving you without enough room to sit comfortably, making it feel like you were constantly falling off.
It worked, in a pinch, but when we found enough money and the space to put in a small couch a year ago, the shoe box couch fell out of use, and other than being a place to store our shoes, it became the place of choice to pile on clutter and mess… since no one sat on it anyhow.
When we revamped our home and gave it a makeover and I finally decided what style I was looking for in terms of colors and design of furniture, I realized that I considered that an eyesore because it was precisely what I did not like in terms of aesthetics- not neat, crisp lines, but bulky and all over, and a color I strongly disliked.
So we did a temporary fix- I threw on a grey cover which at least made the color to my liking, and covered the pillows in covers whose colors I liked, and said we’ll finish the project later, when we found time.
He built wooden dividers (using dumpster dived wood ) inside and organized all the shoes.
And he took off all the cushioning, once again leaving the wood exposed.
Last night, therefore, I took the grey fabric I had been using as a throw for it, and sewed it to cover the foam we had for the couch (both what was previously on the back and the bottom). I wasn’t able to get the sewing machine to work, so I did it by hand. To be able to remove the fabric to wash it, I sewed the sides together but just have overlapping fabric in the middle to be able to open up for cushion removal.
I was afraid that the fabric would open though when I didn’t want it to, so I secured it together with these two large wooden buttons I inherited from my grandmother, and instead of making button holes, I made loops out of crocheted string (since I couldn’t find any thick enough string), which I then sewed down. It holds it down nicely to close, and even though it isn’t aesthetic, it doesn’t matter because it does the job, and its on the underside of the cushion anyhow. I was worried that with a button of this size, you’d be able to feel it through the cushion, as in the Princess and the Pea, but you can’t feel its presence.
I didn’t bother painting the area under the cushion.
And here is the final product.
I think it looks terrific! I appeals much more to my aesthetic tastes, and it is much more comfortable too! I already am seeing it getting much more use in the past day than it did in the months prior.
It’s like we have a new piece of furniture- for no extra cost!