Hydrozoan
Well-Known Member
We currently intend to re-upholster ourselves (using an artifical suede specified for marine use) and in the process split long seats and backs for easier access to storage. We are now considering the underlining and closures for the seat cushions.
The ‘standard’ underlining material is a breathable vinyl, and the current upholstery seems to have something like that; but it is 20 years old – would it then have been breathable, I wonder? Zips are fitted along the centres of the underlinings, and condensation lines occur beneath them.
Do people with more modern boats also find condensation lines under zips, or is that showing that our existing underlinings are not breathable?
Would closure using Velcro be practicable, as the current zip arrangement does not make it easy to get the covers off and on (though it would be easier with smaller cushions, of course)? Or would zips be best, but in the back edges of the cushions?
Any thoughts on these issues – or on interior re-upholstery in general – would be welcomed.
The ‘standard’ underlining material is a breathable vinyl, and the current upholstery seems to have something like that; but it is 20 years old – would it then have been breathable, I wonder? Zips are fitted along the centres of the underlinings, and condensation lines occur beneath them.
Do people with more modern boats also find condensation lines under zips, or is that showing that our existing underlinings are not breathable?
Would closure using Velcro be practicable, as the current zip arrangement does not make it easy to get the covers off and on (though it would be easier with smaller cushions, of course)? Or would zips be best, but in the back edges of the cushions?
Any thoughts on these issues – or on interior re-upholstery in general – would be welcomed.