I would love to know. Thinking the Hispanic side of town may be the hot ticket. They work harder than i do!
I wish you all a happy and successful new year. Surprisingly, there's a small upholstery shop near me where time seems to have stood still. My buddy had his Ford Mustang seats refurbished there, just new center sections installed—it was done superbly. So I asked if they'd do the interior of my Model A. I made the panels for the trim, and the upholsterers covered everything. See for yourselves. Regards Harald
DAMN NICE JOB... IS THE PICS 2 DIFFERANT MATERIAL.... ONE IS SINGLE AND THE SEATS ARE DOUBLE STICHED...
No, it's one type, then quilted in a diamond pattern and sewn together. I've always wanted a bench like that with diamond quilting. Regards Harald
Seeing the quilted pattern in the above post reminded me of this: Just imagine how much skill it took to layout the perforated area so it did not fall into where the s***ching is. ( the perforations had to be done on the fabric before it was sewn)
I have a 83 year old friend who still does upholstery. He's old-school and doesn't do fancy street rod stuff. Still has a duck tail hairstyle. His prices are reasonable and he's super fast. This is for my 30 A I'm finishing. He's done 6 cars for me so far. I have him sew and finish seats and just sew all materials for panels which I put together and install. I told him he can't quit or die before I'm done building cars.
In the late 1950s,I worked part time at Newt's Upholstery,he did Cars n boat,chairs,couchs,pretty much anything that came in! I cleaned up,n some time removed old covers,an learn a lot by watching. Newt did my 28A roadster as pay. Fun guy,that like too talk; so cool! I don't know how many kids now days,get job's to learn things ? The next part time after school,was at a Paint n Body shop. Knowing how to do thing right=$$$$$$$$ saved.
I can't answer that at all. Only what you see in the picture is leather. The rest is a slightly co****r fabric; the headliner is a Legacy ragtop. Regards, Harald
Local shop that mainly does repairs on big trucks for dealers did the seat for my '39 p/u based on a Glide Engineering frame. Very happy with the finished seat.
What part of they don’t you understand? Seriously The reference was in general to Hispanic upholsterers. They work harder than he does.