Patio Furniture Covers Zipper

Bosmere Patio Furniture Cover Collection Classic Accessories® Ravenna Patio Furniture Cover Collection Classic Accessories® Veranda Patio Furniture Cover Collection Classic Accessories® Sodo Patio Furniture Cover Collection SimplyShade Polyester Protective Patio Furniture Covers Collection Classic Accessories® Veranda Outdoor Bistro Patio Table and Chair Set Cover Classic Accessories® Ravenna Patio Bistro Table and Chair Cover in Dark Taupe Classic Accessories® Veranda Firepit Cover Crosley Outdoor Rectangular Table Furniture Cover in Brown Classic Accessories® Veranda Outdoor Loveseat Cover Classic Accessories® Veranda Firepit Table Cover Bosmere Bird Bath Cap Cover Bosmere Bicycle Cover in Green Bosmere Square Fire Pit Cover in Green Bosmere 2-Seater Bench Cover in Green Bosmere Low Fire Pit Cover in Green Bosmere 8-Seater Picnic Table Cover in Green Bosmere Large Chimenea Cover in Green

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Pet For Sale Winnipeg Classic Accessories® Veranda Outdoor Double Wide Chaise Lounge/Club Chair Cover
Diy Mickey Mouse T Shirt Classic Accessories® Terrazzo Coffee Table Outdoor Furniture Cover
Ac Unit Metal Cage Classic Accessories® Ravenna Loveseat Outdoor Furniture Cover

Classic Accessories® Ravenna Outdoor Firepit Cover Classic Accessories® Ravenna Square Outdoor Firepit Cover Classic Accessories® Veranda Round Outdoor Table Cover with Umbrella Hole Classic Accessories® Veranda Round Hot Tub Cover Classic Accessories® Veranda Round Table Top Heater Cover Classic Accessories® Veranda Rectangle Hot Tub Cover Classic Accessories® Veranda Pyramid Table Top Heater Cover Classic Accessories® Veranda Square Hot Tub Cover Classic Accessories® Veranda General Purpose Patio Furniture Set Cover Classic Accessories® Veranda Square Patio Table Outdoor Cover Classic Accessories® Ravenna Patio Fire Pit Cover Classic Accessories® Veranda Rectangle/Oval Patio Table Outdoor Cover Classic Accessories® Veranda Round Patio Table Outdoor Cover Classic Accessories® Ravenna Corner Sectional Outdoor Furniture Cover in Taupe Classic Accessories® Ravenna Deep Lounge/Club Chair Outdoor Furniture Cover in Taupe

Classic Accessories® Ravenna Double Wide Chaise Lounge/Club Chair Cover in Taupe Classic Accessories® Ravenna Outdoor Firepit Table Cover in Taupe Classic Accessories® Ravenna 6-Chair Stackable Chaise Lounge/Club Chair Cover in Taupe Patio Furniture CoversPatio furniture covers help protect your valuable patio pieces from the elements during the off-season. Covers help eliminate the need to store & transport heavy furniture to the garage or storage facility. Conceal & shelter tables, chairs, loveseats, chaise loungers, umbrellas, grills and lots more with these great weather resistant protectors.If it does not zipper, how does it fasten to the chest? The cover itself has an elasticized bottom and adjustable Velcro leg ties to keep it in place. It zippers around the top for ease of access to the contents. Thank you for your question.The top where the lid opens up does have a zipper opening. The cover stays secure on the chest just by it slipping over the entire chest like a glove, it has an elastic bottom and hook and look ties which secure at the base feet if needed.

Summer Sewing ~ Perfectly Portable Cushion on July 22 | in Sewing Tutorials + Patterns | From Beth: You’ll enjoy Autum’s Perfectly Portable Cushions both inside and outdoors, all through the year! Autum has lent her sewing expertise and design savvy to the blog before, with her excellent Bag Month Lining Tutorials and Zippered & Slip Pocket Tutorials. Her creative little daisy blog is an ongoing source of inspiration. Enjoy Autum’s Perfectly Portable Cushion Tutorial below, then be sure to visit creative little daisy (regularly!). Perfectly Portable Cushion Tutorial by Autum Fabric for top and bottom of cushion, gusset and piping. Go wild and choose three different fabrics. A heavy weight fabric such as home dec wt. is recommended. For the pink and red floral cushion I used three different Martha Stewart dishtowels.You can buy foam inserts or foam by the yard at most fabric stores or you can recover an existing cushion. Heavy weight interfacing for handles

Zipper– Choose a zipper that is at least 4 inches longer than the back of the cushion. Rotary Cutter and Mat Denim Needle (helpful for sewing through multiple layers of heavy fabric) Pencil or fabric marker Fusible tape or Elmer’s school glue The amount of fabric needed will depend on the size of your cushion. For this tutorial I am covering a 15 inch square piece of foam that is 3 ¼ inches deep. To determine how much you’ll need, measure the length, width, and depth of the cushion you’ll be covering. To determine the amount of cording you will need add the length + width of your foam cushion and multiply times four. Cording is fairly inexpensive, I usually buy it 20 yards at the time so I always have some on hand. ½ ” seam allowances unless otherwise specified. Cut one top and one bottom piece (length + 1″ x width +1″) For gusset cut one: (length + width + 1″ x depth + 2″) cut one (length + width +1″ x depth + 1″)

For handles cut two of fabric and two of heavy weight interfacing 4″ x 6″. Cut bias strips for piping This is the best method I’ve found for cutting bias strips. I first saw it described in one of my aunt’s quilting books and I’ve seen it around online. It’s one of those things I file under how did they figure that out? Who was the first to say, hmmm…. I think if you cut this like that and sew this here and cut again, you’ll get a continuous strip of bias cut fabric. It looks kind of strange but after you’ve done it a time or two, it’s a breeze. What I love is that it yields a lot from a small amount of fabric. I’ll demonstrate using a 13.5″ square of fabric and end up with about 3 yards of 1 ½” bias strips. Start with a square of fabric, fold it in half and press. Cut in half along the fold. Pin with right sides together and sew using a 1/4″ seam allowance. Mark lines on the wrong side every 1.5″ (If you use this same method to cut bias strips for binding or if you have thick cording, you will need to adjust this number accordingly).

Now, this next part seems awkward as all get out to me, but trust me, it works. Bring the fabric together to join the ends of the lines you marked. Skip the first line, as shown in the picture (a critical step). Stitch, using 1/4″ seam allowance. Your lines should meet and if you skipped that first line like you were supposed to, you will be able to cut along the lines and end up with a very long bias strip. Now all you have to do is cover your cording and you will have lovely custom piping for your cushion. Of course, you could buy piping already made, but how boring would that be? Turn under one short end of the bias strip; encase the cording by folding the bias strip around it– starting the cording about 1/2″ from the end. I like to use pins every few inches to keep the fabric even around the cording, but you pin haters can skip that if you like. A zipper foot or a cording foot is pretty necessary for this, it allows you to stitch right next to the cording, encasing it tightly in the bias strip.

Continue stitching staying very close to the cording. When you are finished, admire your beautiful custom made piping and wonder why you haven’t done this before. Pin the folded end of the piping to your cushion top piece. Start in the center of one side, placing a few pins to hold things while you start stitching. I don’t pin all the way around, but you can if you like. Begin stitching about ¾ from the beginning keeping your stitches along the line of stitching next to the cording. When you reach the corner, pull the piping around the corner, clipping the seam allowances of the piping to allow it to ease around the corner. Allow your needle to follow the curve of the piping. When you reach the end clip the piping so that it meets the cording at the beginning, tuck it into the folded edge and stitch in place. Again, marvel at your beautiful work and be amazed how easy it was to apply your own piping. When you’re done admiring, do the same thing for the bottom of the cushion.

Now let’s make a gusset. Take the wider of the two strips and fold it in half the long way, press the fold in place. Cut along the fold. Lay the fabric wrong side up and center your zipper on the fabric. Make a mark on your fabric at the zipper pull and stop. With right sides together, stitch, using ½ inch seam allowance. Machine baste between the marks you made by selecting the longest stitch length on your machine. Backstitch at the beginning and end of the basting stitches. Use regular length stitches before and after the marks. Press the seam open. Apply a strip of ½ inch fusible tape to the seam allowances. If you don’t have fusible tape, you can run a very thin bead of Elmer’s school glue along both sides of the seam allowances. Place the zipper teeth side down centering it between the lines with the teeth over the seam. Press to fuse in place. Using your zipper foot with the needle positioned to the right, stitch down both sides and along the top and bottom of the zipper.

Turn fabric to right side and remove basting stitches. Marvel yet again, at how easy it was to insert a zipper. Why have you been so afraid? Sew the gusset pieces together at each short side to make a tube. At this point, I like to place the gusset on the foam to be sure everything is fitting nicely. Arrange it like it will be once completed, and make a mark on the wrong side at each corner. Remove the gusset and stitch a line (about an inch or so) ½ inch in from the raw edge at each corner mark. Clip the corner up to but not through the stitching. Place the gusset back on the foam, wrong side out and pin the top piece to the gusset. Stitch the gusset to the top piece using the zipper foot so that you can stitch right next to the piping. It may be helpful to sew with the seat piece on top so that you can follow the stitching line made when you applied the piping. We’re in the home stretch now. Place what you’ve just sewn back on the foam to check fit and mark for your handles (the portable part).

I guess we should make those handles first though. Cut two pieces of fabric and two pieces of heavy weight interfacing 4″ x 6″. Fuse interfacing to wrong side of each piece. On each 4″ side, fold the raw edge under about ¼ “. Fold in half the long way, press. Open and fold each side in to the center. Fold in half so the raw edges are hidden. Stitch along both sides. Repeat with the other handle. Find the center of the sides of the gusset, where you would like to place your handles, and make a mark on the fabric at either end of the handle. The marks will be a guide, just in case the handle were to shift between pinning and sewing, and end up crooked, even though you had them pinned and thought they were straight. Stitch the handles in place. (I made a square with an X in the center at each end to be sure the handles aren’t going anywhere.) Can you believe it? Just to sew the bottom in place and you’ll be sitting pretty. Pin the bottom to the gusset.