Last week I sang the praises of Ikea’s Strandmon wing chair. However, there is one shortcoming we encountered with this chair that I didn’t talk about.
(To be fair, the shortcoming is more a result of a DIY we attempted rather than the fault of the chair itself.)
When I was planning the nursery, I knew I wanted the Ikea Strandmon. I also really wanted it to be a rocking chair.
I saw a tutorial converting the Strandmon to a rocker and it seemed really straightforward, so I thought it would definitely be something we could handle.
The biggest obstacle was sourcing the rockers. I was skeptical of the rockers that were available online. I wasn’t sure that the dimensions or the curve would be right for our chair. And I of course didn’t like the prices.
I contacted a local specialty wood store that does custom orders and got a quote from them. They wanted about $300. Not at all unreasonable given the work involved, but they also wanted me to supply a pattern. Figuring out the arc was my main stumbling block. I wanted someone to do that for me! If I was making my own pattern, I might as well make my own rockers.
The Strandmon is a large chair, so I knew I needed big rockers. My parents have a large rocking chair, so my Mom and I turned it on its side and traced the rockers. Then I went back to my specialty wood store and bought a beautiful (and heavy and expensive) piece of red oak.
I traced my pattern and carefully cut the rockers on my Dad’s bandsaw (I wish I have a photo of this as I was quite pregnant at the time). Then I brought them home and sanded the heck out of them. They came out so, so well. Perfectly smooth. Great curve. I was so proud that my plan was working.
Then Matt and I tested them. We were trying to figure out where to drill the holes to affix the Strandmon onto the rockers. So we set the chair on the rockers. And the chair tipped right over. The weight of the back was too much for the rockers and the chair became super unstable.
We tried again and again to find a spot where the Strandmon could balance. We eventually found a point where the chair would sit on the rockers without toppling over. But it was still really tipped. I couldn’t imagine how I would maneuver myself into the chair while holding a baby.
I was super disappointed, but it was also pretty funny to see how crooked I made the chair (please note how crooked this photo is, which actually makes the chair look straighter than it is).
I spent a couple of weeks trying to come up with a solution. I considered cutting Strandmon’s legs to shift the balance somehow. I had a plan to adjust my rocker pattern to decrease the curve. I was going to do a pair of test rockers out of cheap wood before going to buy more oak. But in the end, I tucked the rockers and their pattern under the bookshelf in Ellie’s room and tried to forget about them.
Now, after nearly seven months of many, many hours spent in Strandmon, I pretty much have forgotten about the rockers. The rocker-less Strandmon has been working well as my nursing chair, and I’m honestly not missing the motion.
What kind of chair do you have in your nursery? Anyone else going rockerless? Make me feel better, would you? Share your own #DIYfail in the comments.
Well.. my mother has always claimed that babies get “addicted” to rocking and it is best not to rock them if you can help it. Soooo…good job!
Too funny. Yay us!
Ha, I don’t know what I would have done without our glider. 🙂 We have done our best to make sure our son isn’t addicted to the rocking motion (aka, didn’t rock him to sleep every single time) and overall we have succeeded, but when he’s been sick or teething, the motion has been a lifesaver for us.
It’s too bad your rockers didn’t work out, but I’m glad that the chair is overall perfect for you!
I feel like rocking would be one of those involuntary motions that you can’t help doing with a baby. You know how you find yourself swaying while standing up… even when you’re not holding the baby?
Who would have thought the balance would be so affected! Maybe regular rockers have a different angle to their legs. At least you tried, and also at least you didn’t spend 300 on the labour! Maybe someday you can use those rockers for something else. I love the picture of you and Ellie reading. And she sure looks small sitting in the Strandmon by herself!
I hung onto them because I definitely feel they could have a life with something else… another chair, a cradle… just not Strandmon.
Why don’t you contact the people who did the original diy? They might share the pattern with you.
That’s a good idea, except they purchased their rockers.
They could trace them.
How disappointing! It seems like you did everything I would have thought of. I think that would be so comfy as a rocker too!
Yeah. I was pretty bummed for awhile. Fortunately the chair is pretty comfy on its own.