Well I forgot how tedious this crap is, and sitting hunched over on the floor gets pretty uncomfortable, so I thought I'd whip up a little DIY instead of actually getting work done. I've wrapped many things in many cars over the past 5 years and thought I'd use a piece from this project to write up my methodologies.
Step 1: Get your shit.
You will need:
-A clean work area, having a vacuum handy to suck up dust and scraps between panels isn't a bad idea either.
-Good scissors, not that old kitchen pair you used to open your tuna fish when the can opener broke last year. Pony up the $15 and buy a brand new set if you don't have a pair that has only been used on fabric.
-Exacto knife with a brand new blade
-Rubber gloves
-Spray Adhesive, I have both 3M 80 and Loctite 200. The Loctite goes on clear and sprays lightly, but doesn't allow much re-positioning. The 3M stuff goes down like spiderman splooge and can bleed through the fabric easily, but allows more working time. Pick your poison. I've been using the Loctite on the smaller panels but will use the 3M for the actual headliner.
-Rubber Cement for the edges
-Your girlfriend's lint roller
-UV protectant spray, cheap micro suede will fade quickly in the sun, so I'm going to try treating it with this spray I found at Jo-Ann for $13.
-Fabric of your choice. I'm using "caviar" microsuede from Jo-Ann for $13/yard. To cover my headliner, A, B, and C pillars, parcel shelf, glovebox, center console, and kick panel takes about 3.5 yards. It actually has a bit of stretch to it, unlike some stuff I've used before, which is great for panels with lots of curves.
Step 2: Start by trimming your fabric roughly to the size of the panel, leaving plenty of overlap. Then roll over the backside with your lint roller to remove any crap stuck to it.
Step 3: In a totally separate area, put on a pair of gloves, and spray your bare panel with adhesive. I'm using a clothes hanger to dangle it from my back porch, which also makes for a nifty handle to transport it back inside. You just want a light even coat of adhesive, too heavy and it'll bleed through the fabric.
Step 4: Come back inside to your clean room, set the panel down and remove/change your gloves. Then carefully lay the fabric over the panel and smooth out the bubbles starting from the center.
Step 5: Flip it over and trim the excess fabric, leaving 1/3rd-1/2in overlap.
Step 6: Spread a thin layer of rubber cement around the edge of the panel. This shit is stringy as all get out, and will end up on the pretty side of your panel in a heartbeat, so make sure you aren't weaving a web of misery between the bottle of glue and your panel.
Step 7: Once the cement has tacked up a bit, fold the fabric over the edge, try to pull it tight and not let it pinch up around the edge.
Keep your hands clean. Stop and wash your hands, burn through gloves, whatever, but don't try and work with the fabric when your fingers are contaminating everything.
Step 8: You'll end up with these little donkey ears on the corners. Snip it down the middle, then cut a triangle out of each side so you can lay it down without overlapping.
Step 9: Deal with your switch openings.
Take your exacto knife and slice down the middle, then cut a triangle for the shorter sides.
Use the same rubber cement methodologies to wrap around the inner edges. I use the back of a safety razor or something similar to press the fabric down in hard to reach areas.
Step 9: Flip it back over, hit it with the lint roller and marvel at your awesomeness. Treat it with the UV spray and let it sit for at least a few hours, you want the glue to be nice and dry before you go trying to shove it back into place.
Rinse/Repeat for all of your panels. A crap load in my case. So far I've only done my A & B pillars and this switch panel, so I'm gonna be doing it all week if I want to get the car reassembled next weekend.
General Tips:
Take your time. This is the kind of project that vastly benefits from a relaxed pace of work so you can sit and fuss with each panel, instead of trying to get a dozen of them done in an afternoon. You'll be staring at it for years to come, and that one little spot where the glue bled through will end up driving you insane. Part of the reason I decided to completely redo mine.
Be OCD. Wash your hands, go through dozens of gloves, vacuum your work space, change out the paper, etc. Any errant glue or dust will end up on or under the fabric you're trying to work with.
Don't be cheap. Even using the cheap fabric, this project gets expensive quickly. 4 yards of fabric @ $13 each, good adhesive is $10-12/can, the UV spray is $13/bottle, good scissors run $15-30, etc. It will still come out to a fraction of the cost of buying new panels or trim, so do it once and do it right.