
OhDeedoh shared my high chair seat cover on their lovely site yesterday which brought a few new reader requests for the tutorial so here it is! Thank you for all of your lovely comments. I'm sharing a rough guideline for a customizable seat cover since you probably have a different sized high chair than ours.
You'll need to measure the width of your seat and add an inch to get the width for your fabric. Then measure from the edge of the seat base where your child's legs hang off to the bend in the seat and then as high up as you'd like your seat cushion to reach. Mine doesn't cover the wood all the way to the top but I would recommend it as new eaters are still wobbly! Add an inch to that measurement as well and you'll have the dimensions for your seat cushion. EX: 12" x 28"
I'll be using my dimensions as an example so substitute your own where applicable.
You'll Need: 1 cut of fabric measuring 12" x 22" and one measuring 7" x 12" for the front, one cut of fabric measuring 12" x 28" for the back, batting of preferred thickness (I used two layers of thin cotton batting) measuring 12" x 28", a strip of fabric measuring 2.5" x 85" for your binding, and 96" of grosgrain ribbon for your ties, sewing machine, scissors, iron, straight pins.
Place one 12" edge of the smaller cut of fabric on top of the 12" edge of the the other cut of fabric for your front with right sides facing each other and pin. Stitch together leaving a 1/4" seam allowance. Press seam toward the top.
Create your binding by cutting enough fabric strips to measure 2.5" x 85" and after joining them together to form one long strip, iron in the sides 1'4" and then fold in half and iron again.
Mark lines using white chalk or pins before quilting together. I used straight lines along the vintage fabric and then criss-crossed my stitches across the solid colored fabric.
Carefully attach your binding in your preferred method. I simply folded my binding over the edge of the quilted body stitching carefully to make sure I was stitching through both sides of the binding. To finish off your binding, fold your raw end under and overlap with the start of your binding making sure to line up the edges for a clean fit. Next, decide where your ties should be added. You'll need two near the top corners, two near the fold in the middle, and two on the sides near the bottom corners.
Using your button hole setting, create a large enough button hole for your straps to fit through. Be sure NOT to stitch over your ties.
Rachel
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