Leather steering wheel cover from scratch..
Leather steering wheel cover from scratch..
A lot of us have discovered the factory leather steering wheel covers don't last forever. Mine was making my hands black. Not good.
I do a little leatherworking and have some black leather so I decided to make a replacement cover. Not an overlay but a 100% replacement. Nothing real complicated but it took a lot of work to get it right since I've never done a wheel before. Had to redo the stitching a couple times. Turned out great in the end. I used red stitching for my red truck. Plus, my other turbocharged vehicle is a VW GTI with red stitching and I like it.
Here's a rundown of the project..
Removed steering wheel. Removed back cover and switches.
Cut stitching and removed old cover.
It's made from two pieces so I cut them apart, laid flat, and made templates from a cereal box. Corn Flakes, to be exact.
Used templates to cut out new leather.
Removed thread from sewing machine and used it to pre-punch the holes for hand stitching.
Sewed the two pieces together to form the new cover.
Hand stitched it with two needles and a baseball stitch.
Used a heat gun to shrink it around the spokes for a "not quite perfect but pretty darn good" fit.
It should last another 16 years before I have to do it again, lol.
I do a little leatherworking and have some black leather so I decided to make a replacement cover. Not an overlay but a 100% replacement. Nothing real complicated but it took a lot of work to get it right since I've never done a wheel before. Had to redo the stitching a couple times. Turned out great in the end. I used red stitching for my red truck. Plus, my other turbocharged vehicle is a VW GTI with red stitching and I like it.
Here's a rundown of the project..
Removed steering wheel. Removed back cover and switches.
Cut stitching and removed old cover.
It's made from two pieces so I cut them apart, laid flat, and made templates from a cereal box. Corn Flakes, to be exact.
Used templates to cut out new leather.
Removed thread from sewing machine and used it to pre-punch the holes for hand stitching.
Sewed the two pieces together to form the new cover.
Hand stitched it with two needles and a baseball stitch.
Used a heat gun to shrink it around the spokes for a "not quite perfect but pretty darn good" fit.
It should last another 16 years before I have to do it again, lol.
Dam, that is NICE!!!! Thanks for the pics and writeup!!!
I imagine you could make a pretty good side line business if you wanted to, just by making and selling covers by using the templates you already have and selling the cover and instructions on how to stitch it. I KNOW that I'd buy one in a heartbeat.
I imagine you could make a pretty good side line business if you wanted to, just by making and selling covers by using the templates you already have and selling the cover and instructions on how to stitch it. I KNOW that I'd buy one in a heartbeat.
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Yeah, it was a lot of work and mildly frustrating. And my truck was without a steering wheel for a week. It's really hard to drive that way, lol.
I would have to recommend the generic overlay type of cover unless you happen to have stuff laying around like I did and you can do without your truck for a week.
I would have to recommend the generic overlay type of cover unless you happen to have stuff laying around like I did and you can do without your truck for a week.
Leatherwork question
A lot of us have discovered the factory leather steering wheel covers don't last forever. Mine was making my hands black. Not good.
I do a little leatherworking and have some black leather so I decided to make a replacement cover. Not an overlay but a 100% replacement. Nothing real complicated but it took a lot of work to get it right since I've never done a wheel before. Had to redo the stitching a couple times. Turned out great in the end. I used red stitching for my red truck. Plus, my other turbocharged vehicle is a VW GTI with red stitching and I like it.
Here's a rundown of the project..
Removed steering wheel. Removed back cover and switches.
Cut stitching and removed old cover.
It's made from two pieces so I cut them apart, laid flat, and made templates from a cereal box. Corn Flakes, to be exact.
Used templates to cut out new leather.
Removed thread from sewing machine and used it to pre-punch the holes for hand stitching.
Sewed the two pieces together to form the new cover.
Hand stitched it with two needles and a baseball stitch.
Used a heat gun to shrink it around the spokes for a "not quite perfect but pretty darn good" fit.
It should last another 16 years before I have to do it again, lol.
I do a little leatherworking and have some black leather so I decided to make a replacement cover. Not an overlay but a 100% replacement. Nothing real complicated but it took a lot of work to get it right since I've never done a wheel before. Had to redo the stitching a couple times. Turned out great in the end. I used red stitching for my red truck. Plus, my other turbocharged vehicle is a VW GTI with red stitching and I like it.
Here's a rundown of the project..
Removed steering wheel. Removed back cover and switches.
Cut stitching and removed old cover.
It's made from two pieces so I cut them apart, laid flat, and made templates from a cereal box. Corn Flakes, to be exact.
Used templates to cut out new leather.
Removed thread from sewing machine and used it to pre-punch the holes for hand stitching.
Sewed the two pieces together to form the new cover.
Hand stitched it with two needles and a baseball stitch.
Used a heat gun to shrink it around the spokes for a "not quite perfect but pretty darn good" fit.
It should last another 16 years before I have to do it again, lol.
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scottrod
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May 1, 2004 12:29 PM








