Their trailer was beyond their skill level to repair, so it was sold within the first year. I told them I would repair their awning and see if anyone else wanted it
Another young family purchased the repaired awning, and used it extensively for 6 more years, before a severe storm took it's toll on it.
Since it was Sunbrella marine grade awning fabric, I agreed to make repairs again, knowing it had many more years of use ahead.
It was tedious removing so many stitches, but I was able to free up the fabric covered pull cord, to replace the damaged, previously repaired section again. The pull cord also was starting to fray, so I wrapped each strands with double sided Sunbrella seam tape. I am waiting on washable fabric glue to arrive, to re-twist the rest of the cord.
Repaired section of fabric covered pull cord needs replacing again after 6 years |
A weakened area, from the original dented awning rail, has frayed and needs repair after 6 years |
Damaged section of fabric was replaced over the pull cord |
I had a scrap of fabric stored away in a dresser drawer for 7 years. As you can see the awning hasn't faded over the years, even with extensive use. |
Before I replaced the popped grommets, I tucked some interfacing into the hole, reshaped the hole and placed new grommets. |
Here again you can see the fabric scrap next to the 7 year old awning. Also, see the repaired fabric covered pull cord. |
Replaced a section of the fabric on the end of the pull cord. |
Popped two grommets during a severe storm. |
Repaired fabric covered pull cord slides into the c-channel awning rail, past the new section. |