One of the fancy end chairs of my dining room set broke last year. I thought it would be covered under the warranty, but it was beyond the time frame. So it sat in the garage. Last week I looked at what broke and realized it was repairable. I am not a carpenter, woodworker, upholsterer or craftsman, but I can solve problems. So, yesterday morning it was time to fix the chair.
Sadly I don't really have a "before" picture. Basically, the front 2 legs were sticking straight out forward as a result of leaning to pick something up and putting all of my weight on 1 corner.
First I put Gorilla Wood glue on the mortise and tenon where it came apart. Then I muscled the legs back into position. With a pair of $9 Harbor Freight clamps it was finally looking like a chair.
There were wooden braces that helped strengthen the chair, but they pulled out. Honestly, they weren't very sturdy. I decided to go with a pair of steel L brackets from Lowes. I did have to change the angle of them to match the non-90 degree angle of the 2 pieces Much better!
Then I put a large bolt through the 2 pieces that failed, that I had glued together earlier. I needed a physical connection. This was much better than the silly screw that was there before.
Now I had to deal with this mess on both sides.
Ideally, I would have recovered the top and made it perfect. I wasn't going for a perfect repair, but rather fully functional and decent looking repair. Fortunately I know how to sew. I reused the decorative nails. Yeah...don't do that. They wouldn't go back in straight. I don't have a picture of the nail repair.....for a reason. I'll get a new set and replace these.
The chair is now back in service, instead of awkwardly missing at the head of the table.