Your explanation and visuals (especially seeing the back of the chair) were SUPER helpful! Note to others - if you don't push the needle in far enough, you won't get enough resistance to make it tufted. THANK YOU so much for posting!
Thank you for this! I had a loose button and was going to spend $50 buying the needle, clasps, and twine, but from watching this video, I realized that all I needed to do was just carefully cut and tighten the twine that had come loose.
this was so very helpful, thank you so very much, I was able to purchase the correct tools and fixed my new antique chesterfield bench seat. Beyond thrilled with your help :)
I purchased your tufting needle syringe for button tufting replacement fix, love it. Thank you for making it available to the public not only company’s wholesale.😊 also thank you for video so easy to understand.
My leather Chesterfield bench cushion seat, age unknown, has buttons lined up on both sides. How do I resew them? Repair seat? Also, I would like to add tufting along outer edge, as I have seen on newer Hancock & Moore, otherwise identical, sofas. Need help...no one where I live seems to do this.
I'm looking for the appropriate button cording to use to repair a sofa cushion, that would be strong enough not to break again. What is the one you're using in this video or what would you recommend for a frequently used seat cushion?
Questions, I have a couch that's tufted with these silly crystals, I love the couch which is why I bought it but I hate the crystals and want to replace them with buttons, is this what I'd do to do that?
I think I'm stuck on the part where the aphostery needle (10") seems to need to go all the way from the front (button side) through the back of the sofa. won't that leave a mark on the back fabric of the sofa?
The needle part with the connector only needs to go in far enough for the connector to clear the back foundation padding. Once it gets through the padding it is very easy to release the plunger and deploy the connector without going through the outside back. If you do go too far, a regulator or your nail can heal the fabric( in most cases).