Make Your Own Golf Car Seat Cover

Me on the Golf Car cosy on a cool Calgary day

Me on the Golf Car cosy on a cool Calgary day

I love golf. I especially love that most of the courses I play either include motorized golf cars with the green fee, or they offer them at a reasonable fee. Those golf cars, as much as I love how you can get a round of golf done much more quickly than you can by walking, they’re my pet golf peeve. Those seats are sometimes downright unbearable.

In the heat of summer, the vinyl seat isn’t just hot, it’s extremely hot to sit on. If I’m wearing shorts or a skort, my legs would stick to the seat, or feel like they’re being burned as I sit down.

When the temperature is cool – or cold – in the mornings, the vinyl is SO COLD it would make me cringe as I sat down.

Meghan is showing how to tuck the cover in at the back of the seat on the car. Just lift it up and tuck it in.

Meghan is showing how to tuck the cover in at the back of the seat on the car. Just lift it up and tuck it in.

The truth is, I was always grabbing my towel from off my bag to place under my seat to make my ride more comfortable.

So way back in the early 1990’s, I started sewing golf car seat covers.  Over the years, I’ve tried many different styles and feel I’ve perfected the pattern. Here’s how to make your own golf car seat cover.

Upholstery material for top and fleece for back.

Upholstery material for top and fleece for back.

I like to buy top-of-the-line fleece material and a good quality waterproof lining.  At stores like Jo-Ann Fabric and Craft Store in the USA, you can find pretty well all the NHL, NFL, NBA and many US college team fabrics – so if you have a golfer who likes any of those team sports, it’s easy to pick a theme. Fabricland and Fabricville in Canada also have a good selection of fleece too. If I’m making a golf car seat cover as a gift, I will choose a fleece that is a theme or colour to match the recipient. I buy bias tape .5″ wide and 3 yards long to make ties for the seat cover.

Envelopes for weighting down your golf car seat cover.

Make the envelopes as I’ve described. Leave open at one end to put in the pellets

Pellets for the envelopes

Pellets for the envelopes

Several years (maybe 15) ago I bought a few yards of red waterproof tenting material and I cut from this four 9″ x7″ pieces to make envelopes.  I have polypropylene pellets I bought at Michaels that I put into four small Zip-Lock bags to put in the envelopes – those envelopes will be used to weigh the front of the seat cover down over the edge of the seat so the wind does not blow the cover up!

Fleece lining showing where to fasten the ties.

Fleece lining showing where to fasten the ties.

The fleece material and the lining are cut 42″ x 28″ and sewn together on three sides.  The fourth side is sewn with an opening of about 12″ in the middle to enable the weighting envelopes to be inserted in a channel across the bottom.  A seam is sewn about 4″ above the bottom of the cover through the top and the lining.

The envelopes are filled with the pellets, inserted into the channel above the bottom of the cover.  Then the opening is sewn by top stitching.

The bias tape needs to be sewn together with one row of stitches down the opening.  Then the tape is cut in half.  I like to put the piece of heavy nylon material approximately 2.5″ x 27″ just under the top on the back side to attach the ties on.  This keeps the ties from tearing through the cover.  Each half is then imagepositioned 9″ from the side at the top to make two ties for each side.  These ties are used, where possible, to attach the seat cover on the golf cart seat.  If there is nowhere feasible to tie, just lift the back of the seat up (where the batteries are) and tuck the top of the seat cover in and it will stay put.

This time I used some left-over upholstery fabric from KAS Australia which I bought from Joann Fabric on a recent trip to the USA. KAS has some great designs to choose from – I used this particular fabric to re-upholster my dining room chairs. As usual, I’ve used fleece on the back!

Golf car seat covers are extremely portable – they fold up like a blanket to fit into your suitcase, or you can roll them up to put into your golf bag for long journeys. The only thing you really need to remember is to take it with you when you go – and take it off the car when you’re finished. Trust me. A golf car seat cover will make your rounds of golf even more enjoyable! and if you like to sew, it will make a perfect gift for the golfer in your life.

I’d like to give a shoutout to Meghan, the pro-shop assistant, for helping me with the photos of the seat covers on the golf car, which were taken at Elbow Springs Golf Club in Calgary. Thanks very much for all your help!

Materials

1 – 42″ x 28″ fleece

1 – 42″ x 28″ lining – waterproof or polyester

4 – 9″ x 7″ pieces of material – waterproof is best

3 yards of bias tape for ties

3 cups of pellets for 4 envelopes (3/4 cup each)

2.5″ x 27″ heavy nylon material (strapping)

I made an additional post regarding  making a golf car seat cover.

Hello to all you Golf Car Seat Cover makers. I know how popular my original post “Make Your Own Golf Car Seat Cover” has been since I posted it July 27, 2015. This post has been clicked on over 18,000 times since that date and who knows how many times these covers have been made.Follow the instructions on the original post above and then check out the following.

One of my readers, Sharon, suggested I put Carpet Gripper on the back side of the cover to keep it from slipping on the vinyl seat of the golf car. Off to Fabricland where I purchased an 8″ strip of Gripper and sewed it across the cover about 4″ from the bottom. Parchment paper to be used to sew gripper to cover. I pinned parchment paper to the gripper in order to sew it with my sewing machine. Then removed the paper. I tried the new and improved cover and the seat cover never moved at ALL.

 

Carpet gripper 8″ wide

Thanks Sharon for sharing.

9 Comments, RSS

  1. H. Grimard

    Thank you so much for this information to add more comfort to the game of golf! I want to make a quilted seat cover and I will be following your instructions. I just discovered your blog. Your are a wonderful “young” woman at heart and full of energy and brillant ideas and projects. Thanks for blogging

  2. sharon

    i BOUGHT A REMNANT OF THICK QUILTED UPHOLSTERY FABRIC AND USED A BACKING OF NON-SLIP CARPET GRIP UNDER THE SEAT PORTION.
    AT THE BOTTOM OF THE DROP EDGE A SEWED DRAPERY WEIGHTS INTO THE SEAM… WORKS GREAT.
    FOR TIES I SEWED ON STRIPS WITH A VELCRO CLOSING ON THE SIDES THAT WERE THE LENGTH OF THE SEAT HANDLES. I PUT ANOTHER VELCRO TAB FOR ROLLING IT UP AND IT FITS NICELY INTO ONE OF THE LONG POCKETS ON MY GOLF BAG.
    i FOLLOWED YOUR DIMENSIONS AND IT TURNED OUT NICE AND EVEN WITH THE DRAPERY WEIGHTS IT WASHED GREAT.
    THANK YOU…SHARON

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