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General Upholstery Questions and Comments => General Discussion => Topic started by: gene on June 26, 2019, 05:24:39 am

Title: Making an ottoman
Post by: gene on June 26, 2019, 05:24:39 am
I make a wooden box 10" x 10" x 10".

I glue 1" foam to the four sides making it 12" long x 12" deep x 10" high.

I glue 12" x 12" x 2" foam to the top making it 12" long x 12" deep x 12" high.

The 12" x 12" x 2" piece of foam on top is supported by the 10" x 10" wood box and the 1" foam (on all four sides).

My concern is can the 1" foam on the sides support the edges of the 2" top foam, or will the edge of the 2" top foam get beaten down if people occasionally sit on the ottoman?

Thanks,

Gene
Title: Re: Making an ottoman
Post by: kodydog on June 26, 2019, 05:55:27 am
I think your plan will work. If you are concerned about the sides crushing try this method. Make the wood box then add edge roll (1" should work) around the top. Place your 2" foam on top. Make the 2" foam 1/2 " bigger all around. Then a layer of dacron. Add 1/2" foam all around and under your 2' foam. The edge roll will keep the edges from crushing.

Not sure what your final goal is but I would cover the top first then add a border around the wood frame.
Title: Re: Making an ottoman
Post by: SteveA on June 26, 2019, 11:43:25 am
Before you glue on the sides put a rim around the top 2 inches wide - 10 inches long - 4 pieces the highest density foam you can buy - double glue  it then regular 35 below to finish off the sides.  It should give the edge extra strength
SA
Title: Re: Making an ottoman
Post by: gene on June 27, 2019, 05:37:39 pm
Thanks for the comments. I'm going to give both ideas a try to see how they work.

I want to enclose the wood box with foam so the corners are soft. This helps add to the uniqueness of the ottoman.

My idea is to be able to make a custom ottoman of any l x d x h up to 23" for one price plus COM of 1 yard or 1 1/2 yards of fabric, depending on the size. IDs can include this as part of their original work, as an add on to a project, or even as a TY to their customers. By keeping my cost down (materials and labor time) and having a specific procedure to cut the parts and put everything together will keep my price down.

I'm selling a custom size with COM and a fairly quick turn around. I can't compete on price with any company who makes a lot of ottomans. So I need to have value added to justify my price.

I use the Kreig circular saw guide. This is awesome and quick for cutting our my 6 wood panels to make the box. (I get excited about the Kreig circular saw guide. This is an easy tip off that I am not a woodworker. LOL)

gene
Title: Re: Making an ottoman
Post by: SteveA on June 28, 2019, 09:21:58 am
I wonder if you could use those corner protectors that parents use for child safety on coffee table glass or the corner protectors they use to protect the corners of frames for shipping ?
SA
Title: Re: Making an ottoman
Post by: gene on July 08, 2019, 01:07:05 pm
I just ordered 18/90 1" foam for the sides to see if it better supports the top foam around the edges. I'll use medium density foam for the top. The edge roll was promising but added some time to the process and I didn't like feeling it under the batting.

gene
Title: Re: Making an ottoman
Post by: MinUph on July 08, 2019, 06:35:17 pm
gene,
  I don't want to sound harsh but it seems you are over thinking this. Why do you need 1" foam on the sides to support a top piece of foam? Build your top 1"larger than the box and cover the sides with 1/2" or just Dacron. or even 1/2" and Dacron. Let the wood top support the foam on it. Seems like a lot of foam on the sides. And the 1" will compress when the fabric is put on.
  Just a thought.
Title: Re: Making an ottoman
Post by: baileyuph on July 14, 2019, 06:43:54 am
Gene,

I will look through my files in the event you might find some interest to give a vendor who
makes and ships all types of frames they build (disassembled of course).  As I recall their
prices were not bad.

Maybe you could go on line and happen on to it?

Doyle