I have finished the last chair and used up my leftover cane. I'm really pleased with this one. It will now take the place of honor under the bedroom window where I can admire it for awhile. The deeper red finish of the wood looks nice with our bedroom furniture. I guess now I am done caning chairs until one of the three dining room chairs that still have their original cane starts to break down,
I followed instructions that I found on the internet. Daisy and Button Pattern Caning Instructions. These instructions were laid out by Wayne Sharp who is a member of two of the caning Facebook pages that I frequent. This is all I could find as far as instructions without purchasing books to see what they had to say and I spent a good deal of time on the web just looking for examples to compare my work to. I found very few photos and none that had round (or in this case, nearly round) seats. Apparently round seats are the most difficult to weave. Well, I learned on harp shaped seats so it wasn't a big jump to the round seat. The straight sided seats with fewer holes do look a lot easier. Maybe someday I'll do an "easy" one.
This is what the unbound, but fully woven pattern should look like.
The plan is... to layout the locations of your diagonal cross overs and mark them with twist ties. I went ahead and wove the first four steps of the cane pattern which is the same for all patterns. The dreaded fourth step where you have to weave up and down through the seat wasn't even all that bad.
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| Online Example |
At this point I notice that because of the number of holes on my rim (80), Wayne's chair has about 40 intersections while mine is going to have 60! I did this on the computer first because my chair does not have one middle hole, it has a pair. So first I chose the one to the left as my center and when I was done decided that the daisies would be too far away from the upper left corner and too close to the lower right corner.
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| My Chair in computer mock up - not happy with the centering |
I shifted all of the markings over one row to the left. This is better. It looks "centered". I also marked the end holes as a target to aim for with my tails.
I had both a photo and verbal instructions to follow...
Always run the cane OVER THE VERTICAL and UNDER THE HORIZONTAL in this step. When you get to a Daisy marker ALTERNATE going OVER ONE & then UNDER THE NEXT intersection. So you have to keep two things in mind:
- the over/under of the verticals & horizontal runs
- alternating over/under the daisy locations.
The alternating over/under of the Daisy run will give you a “squiggly” or curved line. I found that if the cane was NOT “squiggly” I had probably missed something & had to redo. Such is the learning process.
I ran that through my brain and it came back with the reaction "Does Not Compute". The photo was not clear enough even after I enhanced it, so I used the computer again to trace each diagonal cane with a color so I could see what it went over and what it went under. In drawing these lines out with my mouse I actually began to get the feel of the pattern.

The first ten or twenty minutes with the cane were a bit tense. After a few false starts I got one diagonal in. The second one of the pair was easier. Then it went well. Sometimes, due to variations in the width of space between canes, I got a bit confused but all I had to do was trace that first successful pair to get back on track. When pulling diagonals, you always start in the center where the weave is still loose to get used to the pattern. I love "pulling cane" through the diagonals. It still amazes me how the cane slides in like it was meant to be there. I quickly found what I expected - because of the squiggle, the cane will not pull. You have to weave more like step 4 and only "pull" your slack through two rows at a time, cross over, and then pull two more rows. I finished the first direction of diagonals in two 1 hour sessions. I sort of savored the process because it is something I really enjoy, and I wanted to make this unique chair as perfect as I could.

The next day I spent about an hour and was moving along quite nicely when I got a bad strand of cane that wanted to snap every time it was flexed or pulled. I did my best to use the broken pieces to fill in the shorter runs and quit for the day. I was afraid to waste even a foot of cane. The pattern was becoming evident and I was pleased with the overall look.
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| Pretty good Squiggles |
The diagonals took me a total of four hours instead of the usual six. I am still slow compared to other caners. No doubt the number of holes and width of cane chosen has an effect on overall weave time. This pattern is quick to weave and a lot of fun once you get the hang of it.
When I finished the Daisy Chains I had enough cane left to do the edge binding but not enough to fill in the diagonals to create the sturdier Daisy and Button pattern. I found that taking a look at the photo later on highlighted a few changes that I wanted to make to the holes I chose for my tails before I locked them in forever. The top edge and bottom edge are both symmetrical which pleased me a lot.
Because of the closeness of the drilled holes, there is quite a bit of cane in this chair which filled in the pattern and made this seat look a lot less airy and unfinished than it might have.
And here is is finally finished.
It turned out really well. I can still judge my own work. I am not very practiced at binding the edge and it tends to roll a little when it should be perfectly flat. You get a lot more practice weaving than you do with this last step. Whomever drilled the holes for this seat must have sneezed or hiccupped or something as he went around the upper left edge. The holes wander a bit and they are the worst in that area. The goal was to use up the cane leftover from the other chairs. I have two feet of cane and some binding left. Whew! That was close!
I brought it in and put it in our bedroom. We have a few extra of these Walnut chairs that are scattered around the house and I have had my last chair under this window where I can admire it for the past two years. This chair, being a deeper, richer red than the other chairs, looks nice with my cherry furniture.
After staring at the pictures and discussing my experience with other caners (many people are curious because it is not a pattern you see very often) I did find something that was bugging me...
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The center rim with the wide open rectangles kept reminding me of bucked teeth. And once you see it you cannot unsee it. |
It was not really a glaring problem when you looked at the chair in passing, but the more I looked at the photo, the more I saw it when I walked by it. So I snipped a scrap of cane and worked it in there.
It wasn't easy to get in there so it won't be falling out on its own.
Now I'm happy with it.