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Three method to fix cigarette burns in fabric car seats. Posted by unregistered on June 29th, 2008 08:12 AM In reply to burn hole in cloth seat in car by Blanche Kaiser on March 20th, 2003 05:41 PM [Go to top of thread]
19 of 21 people found this post helpful
For a quick, cheap repair:
First, fill the hole with plastic cement. Fill it completely full, as the glue will shrink somewhat.
Next, cut a small strip of the same fabric from underneath the seat, where it will not be seen.
Note that some fabrics' base or backing is a different color or different material such as foam. In this case, you must slice the proper colored fabric face off the backing with a new razor blade.
Next, holding the matching fabric in your palm, cut it into dust (very short pieces with scissors.
Once the base glue is dry, very carefully, put a light coating of cement over the hole area all the way up against the edge of the good fabric.
It may help to use reading glasses and a tooth pick to work the glue up against all the edges.
Now, press the cloth dust onto the glue. Allow this to dry completely, without disturbing it as it dries.
Once completely dry, brush away all the fabric dust that hasn't stuck to the burn. Brush in all directions briskly.
Last, with scissors, cut away all the threads that stand above the fabric's surface.
This method doesn't repair it like new because the spot won't match patterns and because it will be hard. But, it camouflages the hole to make it invisible to the casual eye.
To repair it perfectly, either (1) have it inserted with a new piece of fabric by a professional upholsterer. Or, (2) (cheaper and [if an older car] faded to match better) get a piece of matching fabric from the junk yard and have it inserted into the seat by a professional upholsterer. Was this post helpful? Yes: or No:
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