Growing with a blind dad who caned chairs you don’t realize how much you miss him till you hear caning make that sound you heard most of your childhood. Lost him at the end of 1982 haven’t heard that sound since around 1981 before his diabetes got to bad.
Retired now, but back in the '80's I had a furniture repair/ restoration business, I worked in collaboration with refinishing shops in the area, trading specialties as they disliked mechanical repairing and I didn't want to strip and refinish so we played to each other's strengths. I taught the wife hand caning as you show in this video, using stranded (a tip- use a shot of liquid glycerine in the soak water, it really helps lubricate tame the strands and leaves no residue) while I did pre- woven and rushing types. My wife would do her projects in the living room whilst watching TV. and the kids; we charged $1.50 per hole plus extra if regluing or parts fabrication was needed. My most memorable commission was one where a senior lady brought in a Hefty Trash Bag full of a disassembled hand caned walnut side chair parts into my garage shop. She was desperate and asked if I could fully restore it, I assured her I could, A couple of weeks later I called her when it was ready, she came right over to pick it up. I had found it helpful to keep my projects under a wrap and do a big reveal in front of the customers- showmanship! When I unveiled it she let out a choked gasp and started crying, I figured I really screwed up and got it wrong somehow but she regained composure and explained this artifact was all she had left of her beloved father, and how it was his favorite chair to sit in and take his boots off when entering the house after a day working in the fields, lest mother scold him for tracking dirt, and she held onto it all the intervening years trying to find the right person to restore it for her, and it was just as she remembered it all those years ago, including the wear marks from his keys worn at his side. I learned to never take it for granted that this work was going to be routine, and to be able to give a part of her childhood life back to her was just astonishing to me and gave a new- found respect for the importance of this type of work we did.
Watching this video gave me the confidence to try my hand. After ignoring that ruined dining chair for 20 years and keeping a board under the chair pad, today I am half way done with the new seat and it looks great. As the video shows, it is not necessarily easy but it is simple and very satisfying. I ordered my supplies from the website and they came right away. I am appreciating the other helpful tips in these comments such as keeping a spray bottle handy. You may also want needle nosed pliers to help grab the strand when your hands get tired. One suggestion is that you get through steps 1-3 and if you are at all frustrated or feeling rushed, put it aside until tomorrow, because at step 4 things get real! Soon my hundred year old chair will be good as new, and I will probably order more strand cane to recane the ones that are just now beginning to tear. I appreciated this resource so much and feel I have learned a new, very useful skill.
I'm a 34 year old fully sleeved with tattoos, big holes in my ears, and a rocker attitude. Point being, I realized I just sat for 30 minutes and watched you "cane" this seat, and I was totally engaged the whole time. Fascinating stuff. On a side note, I need to re-cane the back of a REALLY old rocking chair and your videos are going to be very helpful. Thanks in advance!!
This was an excellent beginner video tutorial! She was very slow and explicate with her directions which made it easy to follow. The close up shots were clear and professional. During my first attempt, I discovered a couple helpful hints I thought worth mentioning. I took advice from other videos and used large golf tees for extra pegs. I also used them to place in the weave openings to keep track of where I was weaving during the diagonal steps. A spray bottle was handy to keep the cane wet. Fun and rewarding project for sure. Thanks Cindy!
I've always wanted to learn how to weave a cane and I think I couldn't find more clearer explanation, a better lecture than this one. Thank you Cindy and Ed for these instructions, listening to you was truly a pleasure.
I thought i would never see that level of craftsmanship outside Japan , i was wrong and stand corrected . You are one phenomenal craftswoman, your attention to detail is exceptional and the outcome is exquisite . There is a saying among craftspeople in Japan which i learned when i was studying traditional restoration of wooden and lacquer ware , it goes like this "Perfection is the strict minimum, better than perfection is the aim, less than perfection is unacceptable" and you, epitomize it perfectly .
Merci beaucoup pour cette vidéo qui m'a appris a canner. J'ai refais 3 chaises. Je comprends un tout petit peu l'anglais mais la vidéo est très explicite et permet d'arriver au bout. Merci encore!!
I caned chairs when I was in college. A few things I learned were... Keep water and spounge handy because the cane dries quickly and breaks. Keeping it wet will also keep it from fraying. You will also want hand lotion handy as the cane will suck the moisture right out of your skin.
Cindy, That was so satisfying to watch. I would love another 30 minutes of video just to admire and study your marvelous work. I still haven’t tackled a single one of the beautiful chairs I’ve collected over the years. I really need to get organized! Thanks again for your thorough thoughtful instruction!
That's very pretty. Thank you for reminding me this art. I remember the sensations of hairs sticking out from a newly woven chair I had when sitting on one as a kid from watching this. The hairs would gradually get worn down with use. There was a blind man living a few blocks away from where I lived who was weaving cane seats for a living. I remember him always working on a chair, weaving outside his house every time I passed by in the afternoon. We used to do our chairs there till he passed away. I think there may still be one or two of them that were done by him. They've lasted a really long time! The others have had the seat replaced with pre-woven cane as modern technicians don't bother with the weaving. They just glue the pre-woven cane seat down. You can see it's been glued down very easily. These only last for just a few years and then they need replacing again.
@@Stelios.Posantzis yes it was, thinking that may of been my Father you’re talking about head was blind and he would cane chairs on our front porch. He did it till around 1981, he pass end of 1982
@@mattmeck1446 I grew up in an Athens suburb in Greece. A happy coincidence! I wish people continued the trade today. Watching someone practicing their craft day in, day out gives you a sense of a healthy heighbourhood. Now all I see is cafes and restaurants serving junk food and shops selling stuff made tens of thousands of miles away. Everyone's job involves a PC and communication seems to have gone that way too.
@@Stelios.Posantzis Oh ok, I do agree about it would nice to see more people doing older crafts like this now a day. I have been really torn between starting to do chair caning again “ my dad taught my brother and myself when we were kids” or not do to missing my dad or doing it in his memory to honor his memory and the craft itself. 😊
I love this video. I just got my Grandmother's rocker. Sentimental more than monetary value, it has rocked generations ( including her!!!), it is damaged and must be repaired, restored & recaned. The responsibility of caning terrified me -bad experience with local "pros" taught me to learn how to & restore antiques myself but not how to cane. The caning seemed too daunting until this video. Excellent teaching video. Slow process for me, but so far, so good. Will post before and afters ( one day 😂). THANK YOU!
This was the most thorough caning video I've ever seen! I used to cane chairs almost 30 years ago but had to give it up to raise my family. Now I'm back into it and a little rusty. This brought me back up to speed. Thanks!
Thanks for your video. I just completed my first project - re-caning a Victorian bedroom chair I inherited from my grandparents, following your very clear instructions and tips. Thank you!
I was looking for how to weave a cane and I think I couldn't find more clearer explanation, a better lecture than this one. Thank you Cindy and Ed for these instructions, listening to you was truly a pleasure.
Great video. Reminds me of those good old days growing up in my parents' 1960s home where we had canned chairs to go with our dinning table and set of six canned chairs for living room. As a kid I was taught how to weave those chairs as well as weave bed with 100% cotton webbing which I still remember to this day.
Love the video! I wish I could show off my Lincoln Rocker that this Video alone gave me the confidence to tackle. Cindy has such a calming voice and ability to teach. Thank you for this!
Thank you for the clear and concise instruction. I found it very helpful. I have an antique chair and want to repair it to its original glory. This will help bring that to fruition 😊
watch this video, you will be hooked. I also ordered the Cain from them. First timer and felt I could do this with this video and the booklet that came with supplies. Only problem I had was doing this was hard on 65 yr young knees, and lot of short Cain. was happy with result not prefect but can't really see my mistakes. Thanks for the best instructions that I every got. She great on here. Thanks again.
What a fantastic video! I have 4 gorgeously carved antique chairs that needed recanting, and now I feel confident that, following your instructions, I can do replace the caning myself ! Yeah! Thank you!
Thank you so much for this video! It was so easy to understand and thorough! My in-laws gifted us a rocking chair when we had our baby and, we put that chair to good use because the seat fell apart! I was able to cane it myself thanks to this video! I feel proud to have accomplished it.
This was a very helpful video with plenty of beginner’s tips on working with cane as a material included. I’ve never done any cane work, but was interested in the process. Having watched, I now feel that it’s a challenge I can meet if I run across a vintage chair with good wood but poorly maintained canework. Thanks so much!
I am grateful for this tutorial. If only I could show you my Provençale rocking chair. I am really please with my work. First time! I've renovated my grandmami's chaise à bascule. Thanks for the well-films and clearly explained instructions.
Just finished my first cane chair following your video and have to say a big thank you. Excellent video and clearly spoken. I loved doing it too! I might have a few more to do before I get as good as you but thanks anyway.
Thank you for your help! I have finally finished my fourth chair and they all look great...ok, maybe not great but they do look pretty good! Never ever thought I would be able to accomplish this. I will miss your guidance! Great video, thanks for producing it!
I fixed this antique cane chair, same shape. The broken pieces were mostly in center. Had such a hard time figuring out the pattern, but now it looks perfect. After your video, I appreciate the chair so much more. I wonder who would have the patience to do such an intricate pattern. Thanks.
This really is a great video. Thanks so much. I had a booklet that came with the cane, but there is nothing compared to watching a real person doing it. Great instructions, VERY HELPFUL. The best video I've seen on this topic.
Real nice video thanks Mr n Mrs Hammond, I just bought an old rocker that's a bit of a project but nice solid arms need cleaning up n may have to redo them to get color back , cane seat n back the back is long cane like 2 seats at least , yikes so I'm learning up my Nana tried to teach me , as she was a school teacher at 16 yrs old she couldn't help but wish I remembered all this brings it n her back thanks .guess I finally do something she tried to teach me I was to busy when young .
Nice job Cindy I've came chairs for years u can burn off the fuzzy with propane torch before u paint I use to charge per hole started out cheap lol but it usually take all evening watching movies while I worked use to know a blind man that caned chairs always respected him well happy caning nice instructional video
Thank you so much for taking the time to share your skills, I was able to repair a rocking chair back using your instructions. Thank you from here in Harrogate, UK.
I've used this video to re-cane 3 chairs so far, and it is excellent. The woman doing the caning is so calm and she gives lots of helpful little tips as she goes. Doesn't she deserve a credit? However, what she makes seem so easy has proved quite a nightmare for my last 2 chairs, with the cane splitting or not pulling through easily. Does cane dry out too much if kept in centrally heated rooms, or if it's kept too long?
I had the same problem with cane drying out and splitting just getting it out of the bundle so the last time, I spritzed the whole bunch pretty heavily and let it soak in for a few minutes before pulling out the strand. Made a huge difference! I also spray liberally every few minutes while weaving, even though I have already pre-soaked the strand in a pan of water. Of note, though, before I even started, I applied a few coats of tung oil to the chair itself to waterproof it, so that the wood would not be damaged or discolored by all of the spraying.
I think I figured it out. In your video one piece of cane was able to do step one from the middle to the side holes (as opposed to using multiple pieces to go from the middle to the side holes). I used another piece and it worked. Just making sure I wasn't missing something. Thanks!
Thank you so much, I have a rocking chair that needs the seat replaced, it is the exact same shape with the curve at the front so I'm very excited to try your tutorial
That was a valuable time spent on You tube. Outstanding tutorials my sincere wishes for you and keep educating and preserving this art. With the industrial mass production for Mall consumers this Tutorials is an eye opener of the skill required to for this craft. Hope many will be enlighten by this tutorials.
This video is so great! My dad wants me to start to learn how to cane and know I finally know how to do it without taking all of those expensive classes!
I watched this video a couple of times and then started in to re-cane a chair very similar to the one in the video. Your instructions were so easy to follow that my very first caning turned out very well and I was extremely pleased. Thanks for the informative and very pleasing video (your voice is so pleasant to listen to by the way!)
this is how to make an instructional video. i have a small, low, armless rocker that some guest's boney bum put a dent in & i know it should be redone. the seat is exactly like yours. i didn't think i was up to this, but now i'll think about it!
This video automatically popped up after another that had nothing to do with it, but i sat here transfixed through the entire video. It was amazing to watch. Wonderful instruction and explanation. I'd never had the pleasure of seeing this Thank You :)
this was awesome. I watched so many videos how to weave rattan by myself. I had doubts after watching each of them. This made crystal clear the process for me. Thanks for sharing. I am ready to weave :)
Very informative video.. Calming, satisfying to watch.. I'm doing my 2nd chair soon but have a bit more confidence...kept breaking the cane! But it's all a learning curve and enjoying the new experience.. Thankyou
Great video. I do chair caning but I always check the way that the growth rings lie otherwise it is easy to strip the length of cane if the rings are lying in the wrong direction.
Watched the video last Sunday, ordered a chair caning kit that same evening, got it in the mail on Wednesday, and am now done! Re-caning is a ton of work! My chair has a slightly different shape (rounded back, square corners in the front) so I messed up the diagonals a bit, but it still looks great!
Merci pour cette excellente vidéo. J'ai acheté deux chaises à rénover. Je me suis tout de suite inscrite pour suivre votre méthode. Merci, merci. C'est si bien expliqué. Ce tuto est clair. Merci pour le zoom sur les étapes minutieuse.
Thank you so much for a truly thorough video! My wife just refinished two antique chairs that need to both be caned and after watching your video I really feel like we can do it...maybe even have her do one and I do the other together...Could be a fun project. Thanks again.
I really enjoyed your video, thank you for sharing. I have always wanted to know how this is done and now I do. My grandfather used this skill to replace worn out chairs and always thought that was fascinating. Thanks again
Thank You for tutorial! I just made seat. Only problem, i have very dry air in my room, 2mm rattan dries very fast, and i had to moist it time by time. To finish the ends, i have to use waterspry. But the result is great!
Thank you! I watched your video part as I re-caned a family heirloom. I did it! Just one note, my old chair had smaller holes than your sample here, which I didn't notice until step 6, battling to get those last strands through, so maybe mention how big the holes should be right at the beginning. Thank you for teaching me!
Excellent presentation. Very clear instructions for people to follow. Kudos to the videographer and sound technician! I wonder how long it would take a pro to do one of these chairs. Thanks for sharing.
@@peerlessrattansuppliesllc7113 Without doubt, practice makes the process go faster, but for us novices, it will likely take some time climbing up the learning curve! 😀Still, the presentations you made are wonderful.
You give such a beautiful presentation of caning it’s encouraging me to tackle what is a difficult art. I only wish you would explain how to measure your strands of cane as it’s not cheap and I wouldn’t want to cut too short or way too long. Thank you!
Hello again! You don't need to cut the strands before weaving. Just if you get to the end of the strand and it's not enough to go back to the other side, you leave it down in the hole and grab a new strand. Again, you can contact me at peerlessrattan.com and I'm happy to help walk you through the process!
I have watched your video a couple time now. It is a fine lesson, a lot of info in such a short video. I didn't catch every thing in first viewing and answered my own question after watching 2nd time. I will watch it again before my first try at caning my Moms rocker.Thanks for posting
Growing with a blind dad who caned chairs you don’t realize how much you miss him till you hear caning make that sound you heard most of your childhood. Lost him at the end of 1982 haven’t heard that sound since around 1981 before his diabetes got to bad.
❤❤❤
صص ضد
Retired now, but back in the '80's I had a furniture repair/ restoration business, I worked in collaboration with refinishing shops in the area, trading specialties as they disliked mechanical repairing and I didn't want to strip and refinish so we played to each other's strengths. I taught the wife hand caning as you show in this video, using stranded (a tip- use a shot of liquid glycerine in the soak water, it really helps lubricate tame the strands and leaves no residue) while I did pre- woven and rushing types. My wife would do her projects in the living room whilst watching TV. and the kids; we charged $1.50 per hole plus extra if regluing or parts fabrication was needed. My most memorable commission was one where a senior lady brought in a Hefty Trash Bag full of a disassembled hand caned walnut side chair parts into my garage shop. She was desperate and asked if I could fully restore it, I assured her I could, A couple of weeks later I called her when it was ready, she came right over to pick it up. I had found it helpful to keep my projects under a wrap and do a big reveal in front of the customers- showmanship! When I unveiled it she let out a choked gasp and started crying, I figured I really screwed up and got it wrong somehow but she regained composure and explained this artifact was all she had left of her beloved father, and how it was his favorite chair to sit in and take his boots off when entering the house after a day working in the fields, lest mother scold him for tracking dirt, and she held onto it all the intervening years trying to find the right person to restore it for her, and it was just as she remembered it all those years ago, including the wear marks from his keys worn at his side. I learned to never take it for granted that this work was going to be routine, and to be able to give a part of her childhood life back to her was just astonishing to me and gave a new- found respect for the importance of this type of work we did.
You make it look easy, but I know it will difficult.
Watching this video gave me the confidence to try my hand. After ignoring that ruined dining chair for 20 years and keeping a board under the chair pad, today I am half way done with the new seat and it looks great. As the video shows, it is not necessarily easy but it is simple and very satisfying. I ordered my supplies from the website and they came right away. I am appreciating the other helpful tips in these comments such as keeping a spray bottle handy. You may also want needle nosed pliers to help grab the strand when your hands get tired. One suggestion is that you get through steps 1-3 and if you are at all frustrated or feeling rushed, put it aside until tomorrow, because at step 4 things get real! Soon my hundred year old chair will be good as new, and I will probably order more strand cane to recane the ones that are just now beginning to tear. I appreciated this resource so much and feel I have learned a new, very useful skill.
Great job! We are happy to help with any caning needs or questions along the way! peerlessrattan.com
😅
I'm a 34 year old fully sleeved with tattoos, big holes in my ears, and a rocker attitude. Point being, I realized I just sat for 30 minutes and watched you "cane" this seat, and I was totally engaged the whole time. Fascinating stuff.
On a side note, I need to re-cane the back of a REALLY old rocking chair and your videos are going to be very helpful. Thanks in advance!!
I saw my father weave a cane chair about 40 years ago and today I did it with the help of this video. Perfect
This is probably the best how-to video I've ever seen
Thanks!
That Right !!!
This was an excellent beginner video tutorial! She was very slow and explicate with her directions which made it easy to follow. The close up shots were clear and professional. During my first attempt, I discovered a couple helpful hints I thought worth mentioning. I took advice from other videos and used large golf tees for extra pegs. I also used them to place in the weave openings to keep track of where I was weaving during the diagonal steps. A spray bottle was handy to keep the cane wet. Fun and rewarding project for sure. Thanks Cindy!
Thank you for the tips. I really appreciate them and will be using them on my first project ❣️
Thank you :)
Thank you for the inspiration. I have two chairs with complicated panel shapes and you've made it seem possible with this easy and clear instruction.
Glad it was helpful!
I've always wanted to learn how to weave a cane and I think I couldn't find more clearer explanation, a better lecture than this one. Thank you Cindy and Ed for these instructions, listening to you was truly a pleasure.
I'm glad you liked the video. For more interesting photos and ideas, follow us on facebook. peerless rattan
Pecatocheio nonlacpisco
I thought i would never see that level of craftsmanship outside Japan , i was wrong and stand corrected . You are one phenomenal craftswoman, your attention to detail is exceptional and the outcome is exquisite . There is a saying among craftspeople in Japan which i learned when i was studying traditional restoration of wooden and lacquer ware , it goes like this "Perfection is the strict minimum, better than perfection is the aim, less than perfection is unacceptable" and you, epitomize it perfectly .
Merci beaucoup pour cette vidéo qui m'a appris a canner. J'ai refais 3 chaises. Je comprends un tout petit peu l'anglais mais la vidéo est très explicite et permet d'arriver au bout. Merci encore!!
Je suis content que vous aimez la vidéo, et que vos chaises se est avéré bon!
I followed your directions and my grandma’s chair looks nice and usable. Thanks for putting up these directions.
I caned chairs when I was in college. A few things I learned were... Keep water and spounge handy because the cane dries quickly and breaks. Keeping it wet will also keep it from fraying. You will also want hand lotion handy as the cane will suck the moisture right out of your skin.
Cindy, That was so satisfying to watch. I would love another 30 minutes of video just to admire and study your marvelous work.
I still haven’t tackled a single one of the beautiful chairs I’ve collected over the years. I really need to get organized! Thanks again for your thorough thoughtful instruction!
That's very pretty. Thank you for reminding me this art. I remember the sensations of hairs sticking out from a newly woven chair I had when sitting on one as a kid from watching this. The hairs would gradually get worn down with use.
There was a blind man living a few blocks away from where I lived who was weaving cane seats for a living. I remember him always working on a chair, weaving outside his house every time I passed by in the afternoon. We used to do our chairs there till he passed away. I think there may still be one or two of them that were done by him. They've lasted a really long time! The others have had the seat replaced with pre-woven cane as modern technicians don't bother with the weaving. They just glue the pre-woven cane seat down. You can see it's been glued down very easily. These only last for just a few years and then they need replacing again.
Was wondering, did you grow up in Reading PA?.
@@mattmeck1446 Was that addressed to me? How come you are asking?
@@Stelios.Posantzis yes it was, thinking that may of been my Father you’re talking about head was blind and he would cane chairs on our front porch. He did it till around 1981, he pass end of 1982
@@mattmeck1446 I grew up in an Athens suburb in Greece. A happy coincidence! I wish people continued the trade today. Watching someone practicing their craft day in, day out gives you a sense of a healthy heighbourhood. Now all I see is cafes and restaurants serving junk food and shops selling stuff made tens of thousands of miles away. Everyone's job involves a PC and communication seems to have gone that way too.
@@Stelios.Posantzis Oh ok, I do agree about it would nice to see more people doing older crafts like this now a day. I have been really torn between starting to do chair caning again “ my dad taught my brother and myself when we were kids” or not do to missing my dad or doing it in his memory to honor his memory and the craft itself. 😊
I love this video. I just got my Grandmother's rocker. Sentimental more than monetary value, it has rocked generations ( including her!!!), it is damaged and must be repaired, restored & recaned. The responsibility of caning terrified me -bad experience with local "pros" taught me to learn how to & restore antiques myself but not how to cane. The caning seemed too daunting until this video. Excellent teaching video. Slow process for me, but so far, so good. Will post before and afters ( one day 😂).
THANK YOU!
This was the most thorough caning video I've ever seen! I used to cane chairs almost 30 years ago but had to give it up to raise my family. Now I'm back into it and a little rusty. This brought me back up to speed. Thanks!
Thanks for your video. I just completed my first project - re-caning a Victorian bedroom chair I inherited from my grandparents, following your very clear instructions and tips. Thank you!
I was looking for how to weave a cane and I think I couldn't find more clearer explanation, a better lecture than this one. Thank you Cindy and Ed for these instructions, listening to you was truly a pleasure.
Definitely one of the very best videos I had ever seen on RUclips. That lady is truly amazing, perfect explanations.
Thank you!
I have been weaving chairs for 60 some years, very good job !
Great video. Reminds me of those good old days growing up in my parents' 1960s home where we had canned chairs to go with our dinning table and set of six canned chairs for living room. As a kid I was taught how to weave those chairs as well as weave bed with 100% cotton webbing which I still remember to this day.
It's great to keep this art alive!
Thank you. For making the seemingly impossible task look much more feasible now. Your video is great.
Love the video! I wish I could show off my Lincoln Rocker that this Video alone gave me the confidence to tackle. Cindy has such a calming voice and ability to teach. Thank you for this!
The best demonstration of caning process I've seen and used on antique chairs several times.
+Bernadette Callister Thank you, I'm glad we were able to help you!
.
Bernadette Callister how to weave and back rocking chair
Thank you for the clear and concise instruction. I found it very helpful. I have an antique chair and want to repair it to its original glory. This will help bring that to fruition 😊
Wonderful!
Such a great demonstration. I have 2 chairs to re cane and now I have total confidence that I will be able to restore them. Thank you!
watch this video, you will be hooked. I also ordered the Cain from them. First timer and felt I could do this with this video and the booklet that came with supplies. Only problem I had was doing this was hard on 65 yr young knees, and lot of short Cain. was happy with result not prefect but can't really see my mistakes. Thanks for the best instructions that I every got. She great on here. Thanks again.
What a fantastic video! I have 4 gorgeously carved antique chairs that needed recanting, and now I feel confident that, following your instructions, I can do replace the caning myself ! Yeah! Thank you!
Thank you so much for this video! It was so easy to understand and thorough! My in-laws gifted us a rocking chair when we had our baby and, we put that chair to good use because the seat fell apart! I was able to cane it myself thanks to this video! I feel proud to have accomplished it.
Große Freude dieses Video zu sehen. Und Gott sei Dank ohne nervige Musik. Many, many thanks for this tutorial.
This was a very helpful video with plenty of beginner’s tips on working with cane as a material included. I’ve never done any cane work, but was interested in the process. Having watched, I now feel that it’s a challenge I can meet if I run across a vintage chair with good wood but poorly maintained canework. Thanks so much!
Glad you enjoyed it!
I am grateful for this tutorial. If only I could show you my Provençale rocking chair. I am really please with my work. First time! I've renovated my grandmami's chaise à bascule. Thanks for the well-films and clearly explained instructions.
Absolutely awe inspiring. Thank you for these clear instructions.
You are so welcome!
Just finished my first cane chair following your video and have to say a big thank you. Excellent video and clearly spoken. I loved doing it too! I might have a few more to do before I get as good as you but thanks anyway.
This is my first time doing this very same chair... Now I feel better and not so scared to try this... Thank you so much!!
You are welcome, glad to help.
Thank you for your help! I have finally finished my fourth chair and they all look great...ok, maybe not great but they do look pretty good! Never ever thought I would be able to accomplish this. I will miss your guidance! Great video, thanks for producing it!
+Karen Sillivant Dilbeck Glad they turned out good. Now you can try a rush or flat reed chair, then you can watch more of our videos! :-)
Helo
I just acquired a set of 6 chairs that have this exact seat. All of them need recaning soon. Thanks for this awesome tutorial! It will save my bacon.
Beautiful!!! I just procured a pair of vintage bentwood chairs with missing seats. You’ve inspired me to try caning them! I am so excited!
So glad! Enjoy the project!
I fixed this antique cane chair, same shape. The broken pieces were mostly in center. Had such a hard time figuring out the pattern, but now it looks perfect. After your video, I appreciate the chair so much more. I wonder who would have the patience to do such an intricate pattern. Thanks.
So glad that somebody, somewhere still knows how to do this! Great demo. :)
Thanks for watching!
Thank you, fantastic instructive video. I am ready to tackle again a chair I canned 45 years ago. I just ordered the cane.
Excellent video, thanks! I just caned a canoe seat using only this as a reference and it came out perfect! I'm very happy!
This really is a great video. Thanks so much. I had a booklet that came with the cane, but there is nothing compared to watching a real person doing it. Great instructions, VERY HELPFUL. The best video I've seen on this topic.
Real nice video thanks Mr n Mrs Hammond, I just bought an old rocker that's a bit of a project but nice solid arms need cleaning up n may have to redo them to get color back , cane seat n back the back is long cane like 2 seats at least , yikes so I'm learning up my Nana tried to teach me , as she was a school teacher at 16 yrs old she couldn't help but wish I remembered all this brings it n her back thanks .guess I finally do something she tried to teach me I was to busy when young .
Omg who knew chairs were so entertaining. I watched two of your videos so far and now im hooked lol.
High art of rattan weaving! Thanks for showing this on youtube!
Our pleasure!
Nice job Cindy I've came chairs for years u can burn off the fuzzy with propane torch before u paint I use to charge per hole started out cheap lol but it usually take all evening watching movies while I worked use to know a blind man that caned chairs always respected him well happy caning nice instructional video
Thank you so much for taking the time to share your skills, I was able to repair a rocking chair back using your instructions. Thank you from here in Harrogate, UK.
I caned a chair before but these instructions are so much better than what I had. Thank you a lot.
You're so welcome!
I have to make canoe seats next week, and I feel quite a bit more confident now. thank you
+colin richardson Better to use plastic cane for canoe seats as it stays dry.
I've used this video to re-cane 3 chairs so far, and it is excellent. The woman doing the caning is so calm and she gives lots of helpful little tips as she goes. Doesn't she deserve a credit? However, what she makes seem so easy has proved quite a nightmare for my last 2 chairs, with the cane splitting or not pulling through easily. Does cane dry out too much if kept in centrally heated rooms, or if it's kept too long?
I keep a spray bottle and mist the cane as I'm weaving. Also, golf tees work great for pegs.
Tony Forbess I was wondering if a spray bottle would be good enough to keep the moisture while working. Thanks for sharing.
I had the same problem with cane drying out and splitting just getting it out of the bundle so the last time, I spritzed the whole bunch pretty heavily and let it soak in for a few minutes before pulling out the strand. Made a huge difference! I also spray liberally every few minutes while weaving, even though I have already pre-soaked the strand in a pan of water. Of note, though, before I even started, I applied a few coats of tung oil to the chair itself to waterproof it, so that the wood would not be damaged or discolored by all of the spraying.
Keep it moist with a spray bottle or wrap in a damp towel
A huge Thank You for such an instructive video. I have just finished caning an old Edwardian mahogany chair. it looks great!
I think I figured it out. In your video one piece of cane was able to do step one from the middle to the side holes (as opposed to using multiple pieces to go from the middle to the side holes). I used another piece and it worked. Just making sure I wasn't missing something. Thanks!
+Paul Harvey Glad you figured it out
not for nothing---you have the best instruction of how to do this and damm the saexiest voice in the world!
Thank you so much, I have a rocking chair that needs the seat replaced, it is the exact same shape with the curve at the front so I'm very excited to try your tutorial
Glad it helped, good luck!
What a wonderful video! The caned seat is gorgeous!
Thank you. I have 2 160 yr old chairs like the one you have. Didnt know what to do with the seat open area. Will try doing this.
That was a valuable time spent on You tube. Outstanding tutorials my sincere wishes for you and keep educating and preserving this art. With the industrial mass production for Mall consumers this Tutorials is an eye opener of the skill required to for this craft. Hope many will be enlighten by this tutorials.
So true! Hoping to help pass down this skill to future generations!
I have received 2 chairs that need caning. Now I see that I can do them! Thanks much for this straightforward method.
This video is so great! My dad wants me to start to learn how to cane and know I finally know how to do it without taking all of those expensive classes!
I really like that kind of work! Today the kits just want to hang around on the computer. Crafts are still alive! So lucky!
I always wondered what the weave pattern and method were. Thanks for sharing. Turned out beautifully.
I watched this video a couple of times and then started in to re-cane a chair very similar to the one in the video. Your instructions were so easy to follow that my very first caning turned out very well and I was extremely pleased. Thanks for the informative and very pleasing video (your voice is so pleasant to listen to by the way!)
Thanks for your kind comments, I'm glad you were able to complete your chair.
This video inspired me to tackle re-caning a chair and, to my delight, I was successful and rescued a doomed chair.
I am about to start my first chair, and your calm teaching made me think i could! thanks
this is how to make an instructional video. i have a small, low, armless rocker that some guest's boney bum put a dent in & i know it should be redone. the seat is exactly like yours.
i didn't think i was up to this, but now i'll think about it!
excellent...never have done this but I'm giving it a shot!! my sister will be thrilled with the chair
அற்புதமான கைத்தொழில் ஆசிரியர் ! வணங்கத்தக்க ஈடுபாட்டுடன் கூடிய விளக்கம் ... அம்மாவுக்கு மனமார்ந்த வணக்கங்கள் !
This video was so so helpful! I used it throughout the process of caning a chair.
I'm so glad it was helpful!
Thank you so much! First time for me to try my hand at caning and you made it possible. Wonderful instruction and teacher
This video automatically popped up after another that had nothing to do with it, but i sat here transfixed through the entire video. It was amazing to watch. Wonderful instruction and explanation. I'd never had the pleasure of seeing this Thank You :)
this was awesome. I watched so many videos how to weave rattan by myself. I had doubts after watching each of them. This made crystal clear the process for me. Thanks for sharing. I am ready to weave :)
Very informative video.. Calming, satisfying to watch.. I'm doing my 2nd chair soon but have a bit more confidence...kept breaking the cane! But it's all a learning curve and enjoying the new experience.. Thankyou
Great video. I do chair caning but I always check the way that the growth rings lie otherwise it is easy to strip the length of cane if the rings are lying in the wrong direction.
Watched the video last Sunday, ordered a chair caning kit that same evening, got it in the mail on Wednesday, and am now done!
Re-caning is a ton of work! My chair has a slightly different shape (rounded back, square corners in the front) so I messed up the diagonals a bit, but it still looks great!
Delphine Henault Glad you were able to complete the chair!
Merci pour cette excellente vidéo. J'ai acheté deux chaises à rénover. Je me suis tout de suite inscrite pour suivre votre méthode. Merci, merci.
C'est si bien expliqué. Ce tuto est clair. Merci pour le zoom sur les étapes minutieuse.
Thanks a lot Cindy. I don´t understand english, but you explane it with a video very well. you make me feel i can do it now. Thanks a lot.
Great job explaining the steps. Very clear. The video filming was excellent.
Perfectly presented. Thanks for the lesson, I can't wait to give it a try.
Glad to help!
istruzioni basilari per la paglia di giunco ( grazie,molto chiara ed ottima la registrazione) bravissima!
Awesome video! I caned my first chair seat by following along!
Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge and tips. My chair was shaped just like this one and it turned out great!!
Thank you so much for a truly thorough video! My wife just refinished two antique chairs that need to both be caned and after watching your video I really feel like we can do it...maybe even have her do one and I do the other together...Could be a fun project. Thanks again.
Thanks a lot. Used this to make one with cotton rope. Looks amazing. Greetings from Germany.
Whow, in my eyes (German eyes) the best explanation. Also because you did not took an ´easy´ rectangle chair for your course. Thank you very much.
I really enjoyed your video, thank you for sharing. I have always wanted to know how this is done and now I do. My grandfather used this skill to replace worn out chairs and always thought that was fascinating. Thanks again
You are welcome, glad to help!
Thank You for tutorial! I just made seat. Only problem, i have very dry air in my room, 2mm rattan dries very fast, and i had to moist it time by time. To finish the ends, i have to use waterspry.
But the result is great!
You are a very good teacher. Your steps are so easy to follow. Can you show a video of how to do a chair back with a medallion in the centre? Thanks
We don't have a video on that, but you can see how to do it in the Caner's Handbook by Jim Widess.
So good and calm to hear your voice teaching. Tanks to this video.
I love the artistry of your works.
Thank you! I watched your video part as I re-caned a family heirloom. I did it! Just one note, my old chair had smaller holes than your sample here, which I didn't notice until step 6, battling to get those last strands through, so maybe mention how big the holes should be right at the beginning. Thank you for teaching me!
Excellent presentation. Very clear instructions for people to follow. Kudos to the videographer and sound technician! I wonder how long it would take a pro to do one of these chairs. Thanks for sharing.
Glad you enjoyed it! Each chair is different, some can be done in a few hours, others sometimes take DAYS depending on size and difficulty!
@@peerlessrattansuppliesllc7113 Without doubt, practice makes the process go faster, but for us novices, it will likely take some time climbing up the learning curve! 😀Still, the presentations you made are wonderful.
Very good, no nonsense, tutorial. Thank you.
Beautiful work! Great camera work, & clear explanations. Thank you so much for sharing!
I like the placement but you have a perfectionist touch.
Great
Video.
Thank you very much!
What a pleasure to watch. Thank you for sharing your knowledge and skills.
Thank you for watching!
You give such a beautiful presentation of caning it’s encouraging me to tackle what is a difficult art. I only wish you would explain how to measure your strands of cane as it’s not cheap and I wouldn’t want to cut too short or way too long. Thank you!
Hello again! You don't need to cut the strands before weaving. Just if you get to the end of the strand and it's not enough to go back to the other side, you leave it down in the hole and grab a new strand. Again, you can contact me at peerlessrattan.com and I'm happy to help walk you through the process!
Thanks ever so much for this tutorial. I watched it 5 or six times while I restaured the old chair
Glad it helped!
I have watched your video a couple time now.
It is a fine lesson, a lot of info in such a short video. I didn't catch every thing in first viewing and answered my own question after watching 2nd time. I will watch it again before my first try at caning my Moms rocker.Thanks for posting