I bought an old Phil & Ted’s stroller off of Craigslist.
I LOVE Phil & Ted’s and would love to buy a new one, but they are quite
expensive. The design is a double-decker stroller with one kid riding
underneath the other. Genius.
The red fabric on my stroller was worn, torn in places, and
covered in little black dots. Mold? I scrubbed it with Clorox, left it out in
the sun for a couple of days, and then went to work rehabbing it.
I had heard about something called fabric spray paint, and
Google told me that Michael’s carried it. I went and had a look at it but it
said it was for soft fabric, which the fabric on the stroller is thick. I’m not
hyper afraid of chemicals, but not super keen on sticking babies in spray painted
containers. However, I didn’t see much of a choice and planned to let the
stroller air out outdoors for a couple of days (which I did). I bought 2 cans
of Krylon in a purple/gray color. I painted the second seat from the double kit
first (it detaches). The 2 cans covered ONE side of the double seat. So, I went
to Wal-Mart and bought 3 cans of Rust-Oleum Painter’s Touch in what I think
was called “Island Breeze” in satin. I would have called it “Peacock” but they
didn’t ask me. I ended up using 7 cans of the turquoise color. After taping off
the legs of the stroller, bagging the wheels, and covering the handle, I
painted the body of the stroller. It took about 4 coats. The fabric really soaked up the paint.
I spent about $35 on paint.
The spray-paint left the seat really plastic feeling, which
is kind of gross. I had a bolt of upholstery fabric that I bought at the Thrift
Store for $2.88. I measured the seat, cut the fabric, and measured where the
holes in the fabric should go for the straps. I made those cuts and then
covered the back of the fabric in glue. I used PVA, a common bookbinding glue.
I used PVA because I had a gallon + of it handy. I did no sewing, which I don’t
totally recommend but I knew that I’d be able to tuck the raw edges under the
seat, so I wasn’t worried about it. I also knew I was going to spray the seat
with a protective finish, and that it would be somewhat held together by that. I
also covered the sun hood in basically the same way that I covered the body,
glue. I painted the inside of the hood the same color as the stroller.
After I covered the top seat and straps, I sprayed the whole
thing with a spray enamel.
I left the stroller outside to air out for 2 days before
trying it out. I’m not on vacation with said stroller and getting a ton of use
out of it. Because the fabric soaked up the pain so much, there a few places
that I’ll have to touch up when I get home. I’m mostly happy with the project. I’d
rather have a brand new Phil & Ted’s, but this one is unique and I hope it
lasts us the rest of our strolling years!
Total spent on rehab: $45
*It is pretty stiff now, but no, it's not sticky. It feels like vinyl now. If the stroller were more closed-in I'd probably be more worried about it. AND I covered the primary seat with fabric, so it doesn't have the vinyl feel. If I were to do it again I'd probably use the Simply Spray Upholstery Fabric Spray Paint in red, hoping that the red would take on the red and not take too many cans.
*It is pretty stiff now, but no, it's not sticky. It feels like vinyl now. If the stroller were more closed-in I'd probably be more worried about it. AND I covered the primary seat with fabric, so it doesn't have the vinyl feel. If I were to do it again I'd probably use the Simply Spray Upholstery Fabric Spray Paint in red, hoping that the red would take on the red and not take too many cans.