LawrenceHarding
04-04-2007, 01:10 AM
These were about 18 months old when the photo was taken and had faded a little. The passenger's has been recoloured. They are based on grey hessian backed carpet (a neighbour was chucking it out) cut to shape and bound round the edges with black wool, hand sewn. This took ages so you may prefer to get it done by an upholsterer. The stripes are drawn in by hand using permanent black ink markers (felt tipped). This has to be well worked into the pile and you can expect to use 3 or 4 pens per mat and take an hour or two. The pile is trimmed to enable the badge to be sewn in neatly. I have added a non original heel mat to the drivers side for protection. An eyelet is fitted near the rear edge so it can be hooked back. I prefer to anchor both sides but as standard this is only fitted to the driver's mat. Finally several coats of PVA adhesive were painted on the back. This waterproofs it and stiffens it up.
To make the badge I photographed an original, resized the image (it should be 4 inches wide), printed it out on cheap paper and used carbon paper to transfer the outline to a piece of stiff canvas painted green. The lettering etc is then drawn on using 3D paint.
To stop the mat(s) sliding forward a locating peg is needed. This comprises a piece of sheet metal about 1.5" x2.5" with a bolt held by two nuts at one end . It is attached to the ridge across the floor under the front edge of the seat(s).
To make the badge I photographed an original, resized the image (it should be 4 inches wide), printed it out on cheap paper and used carbon paper to transfer the outline to a piece of stiff canvas painted green. The lettering etc is then drawn on using 3D paint.
To stop the mat(s) sliding forward a locating peg is needed. This comprises a piece of sheet metal about 1.5" x2.5" with a bolt held by two nuts at one end . It is attached to the ridge across the floor under the front edge of the seat(s).