cane for chair seats

here for all you wanted to know about basket reed and more. The size of cane required to weave a chair seat is determined by the diameter of the holes around the edge of the seat and the space from the center of one hole to the center of the next hole. Long select cane is generally lengths of 8 ft. and longer. Full hanks/coils (1000 ft.) will do approximately 3 - 4 average seats. Half hanks/coils (500 ft.) for 1 - 2 seats (Nantucket quality cane). 25 ft. bundles for repair jobs and binding. To see the required and helpful tools needed, please see the Hand Cane Tools category. Click Here for Price 7-10 mm Slab Rattan *Bleached (Hamburg) Cane is not recommended for chair seats. Or try this quick method of determining cane size as found in the English book:Chair Seating, Techniques in Cane, Willow, Rush and Cords by Kay Johnson, Olivia Elton Barratt and Mary Butcher. Count the number of holes within a six inch interval on the side rails.

Holes can be drilled unevenly so be sure to take an average number by measuring several places on your chair. If a partial hole is within the six inches, include it. Match up your number of holes with the chart below: More than 12 holes = Superfine Cane, 2 mm or Carriage Cane, 1.50 - 1.75 mm 12 holes = Fine Fine Cane, 2.25 mm 11 holes = Fine Cane, 2.50 mm 10 holes = Narrow Medium Cane, 2.75 mm 9 holes = Medium Cane, 3 mm 8 holes = Common Cane, 3.50 mm to the top of the page All cane (Hamburg & Natural) can be used for basketweaving while only the Natural (also called Long Select, Strand cane, Chair Cane, etc.) can be used for chairs. The Hamburg cane (also called Bleached cane) goes through a bleaching process that makes the cane initially whiter in color (it will oxidize and darken over time just as all reed and cane does) and more flexible than Natural cane. It will take a dye more evenly than the Natural cane. Hamburg cane is available in 500 ft coils.

Natural cane comes in different amounts - 25ft bundles, 500 ft coils (1/2 hanks or 1/2 coils) & 1,000 ft coils (hanks). The 500 ft (1/2 coils) are designated as Nantucket Quality cane and should be more uniform in color, other than that there is no difference in the Natural cane other than the amount it comes in. Click here: Cane Comparison Chart to see a comparison chart for the different widths available and the hole sizes that they are appropriate for when caning a hand cane chair.
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Slab Rattan and Binder cane are still cane just wider widths (4mm up to 10mm wide). Where does cane come from? It is the bark of the Rattan vine. Please see this page: All About Reed for more information about the Rattan vine, how it grows and how it is processed. to the top of the page Click here to see and print the pdf version of our paper catalog . New products are added to the secure online catalog as they arrive. Please keep the i newsletters as they contain new products and any changes to the print catalog.
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If you have any questions please e-mail us at Basketry, Gourd Weaving & Chair Seating Supplies 1013 Old Philly Pike Kempton, Pennsylvania 19529-9321 USAWelcome to the H.H. Perkins Company established in 1917. 370 State Street North Haven, Connecticut 06473Sorry there seems to have been a system error. The file you are looking for may have been moved to another location or can't be found in the DataBase. Use the Custom search form to find what you are looking for or clickIntroductory Workshops: Join us May 20 for RUSH WEAVING Splint Weaving A Chair Seat Shaker Tape Weaving on a Chair Seat Installing a Pressed Cane Seat We are open Monday-Friday 10am- 5pm & Saturday 11-4. NOTE: Repair orders are currently 2 months for most seats. NEW CLASSES for May-December are now available! Visit the Shop page to schedule your class or workshop. NEW CLASSES for May-December are now available! Visit the Shop page to schedule your class or workshop.

Welcome to Silver River Center for Chair Caning We are located at CURVE Studios & Garden in the River Arts District of Asheville, NC with FREE parking on-site. The nation’s only chair caning school & museum is operated by Brandy Clements & Dave Klingler, two chair nerds on a mission to revive a “dying art.” Its an experiential education opportunity for all ages. All restorations, class fees, and t-shirt sales help keep the chair caning museum FREE for the education of the masses. Thanks for your support. Take classes, from short 3 hour workshops to day-long, week-long, and 2-week intensives. See daily demonstrations and take a self-guided tour of our museum. Bring your family heirloom in for restoration. Donate your woven chair for student practice. Purchase restored chairs in our chair shop. For detailed directions and map, see our Contact & Location page.OWNERS of cane furniture often find it needs repair. Although professional caners in New York disagree on how long cane should last, they agree on what is considered harmful: dry air, using a chair as a stepladder and carrying it by the seat instead of the frame.

Jack Hubsmith of York End Antiques says the longevity of cane chairs can be increased if they are turned upside down, dampened occasionally with warm water and allowed to dry, which tightens the cane. Some experts also suggest treating cane with lemon oil and rush with clear varnish every six months. Rush and cane can be protected with a penetrating sealer of half turpentine and half linseed oil. Cane is made from the outer bark of the rattan vine, which grows in Southeast Asia. The inner bark is used as spline, the cord that holds it in place. Another popular material for spindle and post chairs is rush, which is derived from reeds found in the marshlands of the northern United States and Canada. A less expensive syntheticfiber rush is also available. Cane weaving, done by hand or machine loom, has several styles. In the customary weave, the strongest, the cane is crossed six times and produces small octagonal-shaped holes. ''The difference between machine-and hand-woven cane is that machine caning is prewoven and is put into a prechanneled groove around the outside of chair,'' said John Bausert, author of ''The Complete Book of Wicker and Cane Furniture'' and owner of the Veterans Caning Shop in New York.

''With hand caning each individual strand is woven.'' He suggested hand caning only on fine antiques. Cane can sometimes be repaired, but it is generally replaced. Prices for recaning vary according to chair size, and hand weaving is at least twice the cost of machine work. Places in the New York area where caning is done include these: Veterans Caning Shop, 550 West 35th Street, 868-3244. Machine caning takes a week and costs $15 to $22 for a side chair and $18 to $28 for an armchair. Handwork runs from $35 to $55 for a side chair and $50 to $100 for an armchair and takes two to three weeks. Fiber rushing costs $20 to $45, and genuine rush starts at $80. Hours are 7 A.M. to 4 P.M. Monday through Friday and 9 A.M. to 1 P.M. Saturday. For do-it-yourself caners, raw cane is available for $12.50 a hank. Blind Industrial Workers Association of New York State, 1072 Bergen Street, Brooklyn, 467-9858. Machine-loom caning can be done within two weeks for $17. Hand weaving costs $30 and takes three weeks.

The minimum for rush seating is $22. Hours are 8 A.M. to 4 P.M. Monday through Friday and 8 A.M. to 1:30 P.M. Saturday. Yorkville Caning Company, 31-04 60th Street (near Northern Boule- vard), Woodside, Queens, 274-6464. This 62-year-old company does machine caning in a week for $22.50. Hand work is about three times as much and requires two weeks. Synthetic rush costs $26 to $32, and genuine rush is about $100. Hours are 7:30 A.M. to 4:30 P.M. Monday through Friday. Heights Cane Shop, 90-51 Corona Ave- nue, Elmhurst, Queens, 592-3838. Minimums are $22.50 for machine caning and $45 for handwork. Rush seats start at $25 for synthetic, $95 for genuine. Hours are 8:30 A.M. to 5 P.M. Monday through Friday and 8:30 A.M. to 1 P.M. Saturday. York End Antiques, 1278 First Avenue (68th Street), 737-2428. Hand caning can be done in two weeks and costs 75 cents a hole (in the weave); machine caning, which takes two to three days, runs $20 to $30. Fiber rush is $40 to $50. Hours are 10 A.M. to 6:45 P.M. Monday through Friday and 11 A.M. to 6 P.M. Saturday.