Calgary Herald

Upholstery gives walls the royal treatment

- ELIZABETH MAYHEW

While the summer temperatur­es heat up, I am doing the opposite of what one might think: I’m turning inward with my decorating and choosing this time to make our family room warmer and more cosy. Our family room is where my husband, children and I spend much of our time.

Yet even though we gravitate to the room, I have always been dissatisfi­ed with its decor. In an effort to make the room more inviting, I have tried painting the walls a darker colour, swapping out the rug for one with a plusher pile, reupholste­ring the sofa from a cotton to a velvet, and replacing the overhead light with dimmable ambient fixtures — all without fully achieving the cosy effect I desired.

Finally, this summer, I have decided to do what I wanted to do all along: I am having the walls upholstere­d.

Kings and queens of Europe dating to the 14th century hung fabric — tapestries to be exact — not only for decorative display, but also to insulate their drafty castle rooms during the cold months and absorb sound. The tapestries were portable, so they could be rolled up and moved from one castle to the next.

My reason for not previously upholsteri­ng the walls is simple: It is an expensive endeavour, and last I checked my husband and I are not of royal birth. Even without the installati­on labour expense, the cost of fabric alone can be substantia­l; most average-size rooms (say, 12 by 15 feet) require approximat­ely 30 to 35 yards of fabric, and that’s assuming the fabric is a standard 54 inches wide. Clearly the price can mount even if your chosen fabric is $25 a yard.

I figured I could try to save money by doing the labour myself, but a quick Google search unveiled several DIY fabric wall upholstery tutorials that prove it is not a simple task. I called my upholstere­r, who is quite experience­d in upholsteri­ng walls and, after hiring him for the job, asked him what might make the job difficult for a novice. He explained that every fabric behaves differentl­y, so every job requires subtle adjustment­s. (He suggests choosing a fabric with the slightest amount of give so it can be stretched tightly on the wall.) He also cautioned against choosing a fabric with both horizontal and vertical lines because it is very difficult to match all of the lines and have them appear perfectly straight.

He suggests making sure that your walls are in decent shape and to avoid areas with a lot of traffic unless you are planning on using a durable outdoor-grade fabric.

For our family room, I chose a chocolate brown and cream printed linen stripe that my upholstere­r will seam together and then stretch over a thin layer of quarter-inch-thick Dacron, to give the walls just a bit of padding. The project should be complete in time for fall (I am still waiting for the fabric to arrive), at which point I will happily ensconce myself in the room much in the way a caterpilla­r enters its cocoon. Come spring I might emerge as a changed being, or I might just be so content that I remain inside.

 ?? MELANIE ACEVEDO/ SCHUMACHER ?? Upholstere­d walls can create a cosy space, ideal for cocooning, especially desirable in the family room.
MELANIE ACEVEDO/ SCHUMACHER Upholstere­d walls can create a cosy space, ideal for cocooning, especially desirable in the family room.

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