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CHOOSING A SEWING MACHINE
Quite the most exciting development for home dressmakers in the last decade
has been the fantastic change in sewing machines available on the market.
Anyone who has used only a straight-stitch machine, and is lucky enough to
be planning to buy a new sewing machine, has some very pleasant surprises
ahead.
If you are considering such a purchase you should take several weeks, or
even months, in careful study of the market, before making a decision. Until
a number of the latest makes of machine have been demonstrated to you, it
will be impossible for you to imagine how useful or versatile a good modern
zigzag or automatic machine can be.
By taking your time you may save yourself
from an expensive mistake; for although obviously you will not get the best
quality at the cheapest end of the scale, price is not invariably a guide
to value within the mid- price range.
What are the main types of sewing machine available?
They can be roughly divided into straight-stitch, zigzag (otherwise known
as swing-needle) and automatic machines. Some of the manufacturers like to
break the classifications down still further, and categorize their machines
as straight-stitch, zigzag, semi-automatic, automatic and fully-automatic.
For simplicity, however, we will just deal with the three main categories.
STRAIGHT-STITCH MACHINE
If you are sure you will only use the machine for plain sewing, you may
find that the straight- stitch machine meets your needs satisfactorily. It
may come with various attachments. Before you decide, however, be sure to
try at least one or two swing-needle machines in a similar price range. It
may be that for about the same cost, or perhaps only a little more, you could
have the extra versatility of swing—needle sewing, without any sacrifice
in the quality of the machine itself.
Straight-stitch machines will normally sew backwards as well as
forwards, and they can sometimes be released for free—motion darning, using
a special darning foot and a hoop attachment.
If you already have a straight-stitch machine, you can probably buy various
extra attachments by the same maker. In addition, you can buy a buttonholer
device (62), which will attach to most straight—stitch electric machines
and en able you to produce reasonably satisfactory machine-made buttonholes.
It must, however, be said that although this method is usually successful
with most light fabrics, some of the heavier fabrics may prove more difficult:
in which case a bound buttonhole would probably be best.
ZIGZAG OR SWING-NEEDLE MACHINE
These are much more versatile, even in their very simplest form. By moving
a lever or a dial knob, you can stitch not only in a straight line but also
from side to side. This means that you can produce a zigzag stitch, which
widens your scope considerably.
The simplest zigzag machines will of course give a limited choice of stitches,
but many medium-price to higher-price zigzag machines have a surprisingly
wide range: not only satin stitch, but also blind hemming and over-sewing,
shell edging, making buttonholes; sewing on buttons, hooks and eyes and press
fasteners; finishing off seams and raw edges; and, with some types of machine,
making whipped hems on such items as sheets and pillowcases.
You may be able to produce simple decorative patterns (a small to fairly
comprehensive range, depending on the model); work with twin needles, or
stab needles (to produce very delicate ‘holed’ stitches on fine fabrics like
organdie), and tackle fancy appliqué work.
Some of the more expensive zigzag machines, for example the Viking Husqvarna
from Sweden, will enable you to make a stitch called ‘three-step zigzag’,
which is valuable for finishing edges where a fabric frays very easily.
Bernina machines, made in Switzerland, offer a ‘five-step serpentine stitch’
which is also very satisfactory.
A warning, however, about sewing machines in the cheaper price ranges: a
skilled operator can make any machine perform far more adequately than someone
who is new to the task. A great many people buy the very first sewing machine
they see demonstrated. If you have never watched a modem sewing machine at
work before, it is very easy to be impressed by its versatility when you
see it demonstrated in the shop, only to be disappointed once you have made
the purchase and find that it will not perform anything like as easily as
you had imagined. This applies particularly to zigzag machines.
Let me give you an example of how misleading a demonstration can be. I was
talking to a friend who had bought an average-priced zigzag machine. Before
the sale the demonstrator had shown her a variety of decorative patterns.
She was impressed, and agreed to buy the model shown. She was also told she
would be given instruction on its use, and because she was a fairly experienced
needlewoman, she felt confident that all would go well. However she soon
found that even with tuition it was not nearly so easy to produce patterns
and embroidery as she had imagined it would be. In fact it took a good deal
of skill to manipulate the controls to make a pattern.
For example, she had thought that she would be able to produce tiny leaf-shapes
automatically—but not at all. The differing widths of satin stitch which
filled in the shapes were achieved by manipulating the stitch-width control
by hand—a trick which she found very hard to master. Her disappointment increased
when she discovered that while her machine would stitch only from a central
point to one side (with what is called a two-position or left-hand-position
needle) another machine by the same manufacturer and costing only about 10
($25) more, had a three—position needle—in other words it would sew from
the centre point to the right and the left. This meant that she could have
completed patterns, including her leaf-shapes, in one movement, whereas with
her own machine she had to stitch one half of the pattern and then turn the
fabric to stitch the other side. This may seem a trivial matter. However
it applies not just to one leaf-shape but to the whole range of sewing techniques.
Most sales staff of course, are fully aware of what they are selling, but
they may not want to jeopardize a sale by explaining the difference in cost
between a two-position and a three-position needle machine. If they are untrained
they may not even understand the difference themselves. However if you later
decide to trade your machine in for a better one, you will probably find
the resale value of a two-position needle machine very much lower than that
of a three position needle machine.
Generally speaking, the higher the price of machine, the greater the versatility.
However this is not always the case: one maker’s plain zigzag model may be
much the same price as another maker’s semi-automatic of equivalent quality.
AUTOMATIC MACHINE
This does everything that a zigzag machine can do, and more besides, including
a wide range of automatic embroidery stitches.
Some fully-automatic machines can produce special stitches that stretch
with the fabric—an important feature for anyone who plans to sew with stretch
fabrics, like those used for stretch slacks and swimwear. Some machines,
for example, offer an Overlock Stitch (used to make the seams and bind the
seam allowance in one operation) and Triple Lock Stretch Stitch, and for
these stitches the fabric is automatically moved forwards, then backwards
while the needle stitches from side to side. This is a miraculous sight to
anyone not used to fully- automatic machines, especially when the machine
is switched to slow speed so that you can see the full complexity of the
action. With other automatic machines the needle may move from side to side,
but the fabric will only feed in one direction (unless of course you decide
to reverse it manually).
Even among fully-automatic machines—the aristocrats of sewing machines—there
is a surprising difference between makes. It is not so much a question of
what they will do, but of how the various effects are achieved. Some models
reach the end results without requiring more than the turning of a knob or
two, or the setting of a lever, or perhaps the addition of a small plastic
stitch selector called a cam. With others it may be necessary to set a number
of levers and knobs, or to slide dials to certain settings, or to coordinate
levers and dials with discs or cams.
Remember that one sewing machine is not necessarily better than another
one because it is complicated. A large number of knobs, levers and push-buttons
do not always mean more versatility. Some of the most advanced sewing machines
on the market are deliberately designed to have as few moving parts and controls
as possible; and one of the most sophisticated models available, with which
practically every conceivable sewing variation is possible, has only two
more knobs than a straight-stitch machine.
If you have a very unmechanical turn of mind you may be positively daunted
by the presence of a vast number of knobs and switches and levers which all
have to be coordinated; and if a machine is elaborate in its controls, you
may at first need to consult the instruction book constantly for even the
simplest stitch, which can be irritating.
One machine I tested, the top-price model in its range, fell down badly
on the instruction book. It took two hours to work out how to sew ordinary
straight—stitch, because it was necessary to wade through pages of irrelevant
and disorderly information, including directions on how to use a treadle
machine!
Ask to see the instruction book before you agree to buy the machine. Some
instruction books, for instance, are written by experts who know their machines
too well, and can no longer look at the subject through the eyes of the beginner.
Flat-bed or free-arm?
A flat-bed machine is the type which most people are used to. It has a flat
working surface for the material; and if one is setting in a sleeve, or doing
something else fairly intricate, one normally learns to maneuver the work
to avoid catching other parts of the article in the stitching. With a free—arm
machine, however, there is no such problem because the working surface consists
of a narrow rounded arm with space below it, so that you can slip sleeves
or socks, trouser legs or loose—cover sections over the free-arm for sewing
or darning. If you need a larger working surface, you simply clip on the
ex tension table which is provided; and this converts the machine into a
flat—bed type.
Many people consider that a free-arm machine has very distinct advantages
especially as it can always be converted back to a flat-bed type. A flat-bed
model, of course, cannot be turned into a free-arm machine. The choice is
not so much a question of price as of make. You can get a relatively inexpensive
plain zigzag machine which has the free arm. Many of the top-price automatics
also have the free-arm, but some do still retain the flat—bed styling.
Sewing machine attachments
As sewing machines have become more automatic, the importance of separate
attachments has become less pronounced. Straight-stitch machines in the average
to higher price range usually have special attachments for carrying out a
variety of specialized sewing jobs, and anyone who has bought a straight-stitch
machine in fairly recent years may have purchased at the same time one or
a number of attachments, such as a multi—slotted binder, foot hemmer, zipper-foot,
gathering foot, edge stitcher, tucker, flange hemmer, quilter, gauge-presser
foot and buttonholer. Many of the attachments popularly sold with sewing
machines looked so complicated that people were discouraged from using them,
and the belief grew up that it was sense less to buy a higher-priced sewing
machine, because one would never use the complex gadgets.
This kind of thinking need no longer apply with modern machines, however.
The fully- automatic, and to a lesser degree the semi automatic and plain
zigzag machines, can do many of the specialized jobs without any attachments.
Some are still necessary of course—for example the quilter is a valuable
asset with any type of sewing machine—but their fitting has been made easier
by the use of a snap—on, snap— off presser foot.
This trend away from attachments seems likely to continue. What is happening
in effect is that sewing machines are becoming at the same time far more
complex and sophisticated in the number of operations they can perform and
yet simpler to understand and operate.
Features that make sense
Here are a few of the available features, taken from among the leading makes
of fully-automatic sewing machines, that seem to me to make very good sense:
* Special low-gear speed for complicated work, blind hemming, and fabrics
such as PVC vinyl and leather. It is also highly valuable for anyone who
is not familiar with electric sewing machines, and especially for use in
schoolrooms and domestic science colleges, where students can sew at a comfortable
speed until they gain confidence and skill.
A point worth making here is that low speed may be achieved in one of two
ways. In a machine which incorporates a low-gear speed, the motor itself
is actually slowed down because you ‘change gear’, and the power is increased,
just as when a car changes gear. With other types of machine the process
is equally simple, but the motor may continue to run at the same speed while
the electricity supply is reduced.
* Simplified threading system. Most modern machines have less upper threading
points than they used to have. Some, like the Bernina, do not need threading
at all: the thread is simply slipped over a number of points.
* Simplified stitch selection. Where stitch selection can be simplified
the whole machine benefits. One machine, the Viking Husqvarna, has a color-coding
system, where knobs with different color markings show at a glance which
stitch you are choosing (this means you do not have to consult a code number
in a chart). Some machines use lever settings, some involve the user slipping
on cams or discs.
* Automatic buttonholer which completes a buttonhole without your having
to turn the fabric. This is especially valuable with fairly bulky garments,
when turning the work can be exceedingly difficult. With some machines there
is a special dial with five digits which you turn for each of the five stages
of a buttonhole. One machine, the Pfaff, allows you to cut the button hole
without removing the fabric from the machine.
* Non-jamming bobbin. Modern machines seldom jam in normal home use although
I tested one top—price machine, straight from the factory, which jammed irrevocably
the second time I used it and needed a new bobbin case. Some manufacturers
have bobbins which they guarantee will never jam, because of the basic design.
This is a very important feature for schools or colleges, where machines
are more likely to be misused.
* Pull-down light, which gives bright direct light for working on dark fabrics.
Making your choice
Only you can know what your ideal machine would incorporate, and you will
only learn this by looking around at what is available. So as I said before,
do not buy the first machine you see demonstrated. Visit dealers in your
area and ask for a demonstration (or visit an exhibition where demonstrations
are going on all the time); consult consumer reports and give intelligent
but not slavish consideration to their findings. Ask friends and neighbors
who have recently purchased a sewing machine for their views on it. As you
narrow the choice down, see whether the demonstrator is willing to let you
try the machine yourself, under supervision.
Before you make a final decision run through the following check list:
1. If you plan to buy a simple straight-stitch or plain zigzag machine,
are you sure that you will not later regret being without some of the refinements
which you could obtain by paying a little more? On the other hand, if you
plan to buy a top-of-the-scale fully-automatic machine, are you sure that
it is not too elaborate for your requirements, too complicated for you to
cope with happily?
2. Do you find difficulty in threading the machine, or understanding how
to set the tension?
3. Is the machine so complicated that you have to consult the instruction
manual constantly? Is the instruction book adequate, taking you from the
first stages of threading up the machine and making simple straight stitches
through in logical order to more complicated stitches?
4. Are you sure that you know the difference between a flat-bed and a free-arm
machine, and that the model in which you are interested offers what you require?
5. How will you store the machine? If there is a carrying case, is it strong
and pleasing in design? If you plan to buy a machine table, is there one
in a style which would fit in with your taste in home furnishings?
6. Is the manufacturer a reputable firm of sound standing?
7. Check that servicing, if necessary, will be prompt and adequate. Ask
what period of time the guarantee covers. Sewing machines do not often go
wrong, but they can. There is a surprising variation in guarantee periods
between manufacturers, and guarantees may cover, say, one year or two, three,
five, ten, or even twenty- five years. One manufacturer agrees to replace
faulty parts free ‘at anytime’. Motors are usually covered by guarantee for
a shorter time than the main guarantee—normally for two years.
Dealers’ service—the period when you can expect to go back to the shop to
ask for service without incurring labor charges—may vary between six months
and five years or more, depending on the dealer.
USING YOUR NEW SEWING MACHINE
Having made your purchase, be sure you will get value for your money by
taking instruction on the use of the machine. Sewing machine dealers usually
offer buyers a good after-sales service, either sending a representative
to the customer’s home to demonstrate the use of the machine, or inviting
the customer to come along to the shop premises for tuition. Some manufacturers
may offer one lesson, others two or more, and one manufacturer I spoke to
said that if the customer was having difficulties, which was unusual because
in this case the automatic machine was a particularly simple one, she could
come back to the London show rooms whenever she wished and a demonstrator
would gladly give her advice.
As with all modern equipment, it is absolutely essential to read the instruction
book carefully, not once but many times. If small troubles do develop they
are usually caused through misuse of the machine. So get to know your machine
thoroughly, work in exactly the way the demonstrator and instruction book
advise, and enjoy your sewing.
A good start with a good sewing machine can bring a lifetime of pleasure.
Sew a fine seam
The following notes are directed to those who are not experienced in the
use of a sewing machine. If you are a skilled machinist, skip the next few
pages — they will seem like a primer.
Before you begin to sew a garment:
1. Practice sewing straight. If you have never used a sewing machine before,
it is a very good idea to start by sewing practice lines, angles and curves.
One sewing machine manufacturer, Viking Husqvarna, produces practice sheets
(domestic science teachers and college lecturers can make block app1ication
for classroom use) and they have given me their permission to reproduce two
of them here (63 and 64).
To make up your own practice sheets for home or classroom use:
(a) Trace the designs on to squares of tracing paper. Be very careful to
copy the lines accurately, using a good ruler for the straight lines. (b)
Starting with the first design, sew along the lines keeping as accurate as
possible. Do not watch the needle but keep your eyes on the sewing line.
If you wish you may sew without thread on these practice squares, though
it is perhaps more encouraging if you do use thread. Repeat with the other
practice square.
2. Make a fabric test piece. After cutting out the garment or article you
are making, always use some of the scraps left over as test pieces.

A Look Back ... What was Modern in the Late 1960s...

1. The near—noiseless fully— automatic Viking Husqvarna free-arm machine
looks — and is — extremely simple to use. You select from a wide range of
embroidery stitches simply by turning color-coded knobs. The non-jam bobbin
and the smooth-running slow speed feature make it ideally suited for school
use as well as in the home.

2. The fully-automatic Elna Supermatic free—arm machine. Shown here are
a few of the magnificent range of automatic patterns it can produce using
a selection of built—in and interchangeable pattern disks.

3. A model from the famous Singer range. With the latest models the bobbin
stays in position for rewinding in seconds, while the top thread stays threaded.
Buttonholes can be made automatically with some models, or, as here, a button-holder
attachment is quickly fixed.

4. The Necchi free—arm fully— automatic machine; simply turn the pattern
knob on the side to select from a range of automatic patterns. A special
feature is the Golden Needle giving long basting stitches which are easy
to pull out when necessary.

5. The Frister and Rossman Model F lightweight free—arm fully—automatic
swing—needle machine weighs only 20 lbs, packs away in a neat carry-in case,
and produces 26 different patterns including three—step zigzag.

6. Machines in the low-priced range, like this Novum straight—stitch model
with flat bed, give stitch length adjustment and a forward and reverse sewing
control lever.

7. Moderately—priced automatic sewing machines are obtainable — this Brother/Jones
flat-bed machine has a number of noteworthy features. Servicing should be
no problem if you buy from a reputable dealer.

8. The tiny Bernina Minimatic free—arm machine is not a toy but a fully-automatic
se machine of unusual sophistication. Special features: tins enough to keep
in a cupboard, versatile enough for all sewing. Bernina demonstrators are
famed for magnificent appliqué pictures produced on their machines.

9. The automatic Pfaff flat bed machine has ‘Dial-a-Stitch’ feature for
fancy embroidery, plus attachments which include a rug maker. The carrying
case includes a roomy built-in sewing box.

10. The robustly-constructed Alfa machines have a good reputation in the
commercial sewing machine market, and the domestic ones, like this fully—automatic
flat bed model, are also well worth enquiring about.

11. Today’s sewing machines are almost magical — they stitch from side to
side at great speed, often while guiding the fabric forwards and backwards
to produce intricate effects. Look closely at this model and you’ll see twin
needles, which produce embroidery patterns simultaneously in two colors.

12. Not everyone looks for a fully automatic machine — an inexpensive model
like this Jones flat bed machine may be preferred by someone who is looking
for a means of plain sewing at minimum cost.
Cut a left-over scrap into a rectangle, fold it double, and then machine—stitch
in a series of straight lines to assess the treatment it needs. Always work
with two layers of material. Check the following:
(a) Stitch length—is it suitable for the fabric? As a general rule shorter
stitches are needed for finer fabrics, longer ones for thicker, firmer fabrics.
If there is any tendency to puckering, the stitch length may be too long.
Consult the machine instruction book for guidance on stitch length.
(b) Tension—is it even? The threads should lock at the point where they
pass through the fabric, and there should be no pulling either on top or
underneath (see 65, 66 and 67). Refer to the instruction book for guidance
on adjusting tension. Normally only the top-thread tension will need correcting.
Adjusting of the bobbin thread is best left to an expert.
(c) Needle—is it suitable for the fabric? Is it sufficiently sharp or is
a new needle necessary? A modern sewing machine should have its needle changed
to suit the fabric. One should not follow the long-established practice,
or perhaps I should say malpractice, of always using the same needle year
in, year out. Changing a needle is simplicity itself on a modern machine.
(d) Pressure—is it correct for the fabric? Extremely fine or very thick
fabrics may call for a change in pressure. Consult your instruction book
on this point.
3. Keep to the seam line. Most patterns which you buy in this country provide
for a 4-in. seam allowance on most turnings (exceptions are hems and cuffs).
Your sewing machine may have guide lines marked on the throat plate to help
you to stitch straight and at an even distance from the fabric edge. If it
does not, you can buy a special seam—line attachment, or use colored adhesive
tape to mark a line 4 in. from the needle point (be sure that you get the
tape straight!).
If your sewing machine has guide lines but they are only in centimeters,
you have two alternatives. One is to get used to thinking of seam allowances
in centimeters (most printed paper patterns give the centimeter measurement
in brackets). The other is to fix a strip of colored adhesive tape as already
described.
65 RIGHT; 66 WRONG: Bobbin tension too tight;
67 WRONG: Top tension too tight
4. Beginning to stitch. (a) Set the needle on the seam line exactly, turning
the balance wheel by hand to pierce the fabric. If the machine has a reverse
action, it is a good idea to begin sewing about 4 in. from the end of the
fabric, stitch backwards to within in. of the end of the fabric, then stitch
forwards again over the same line. When you begin to stitch forwards again,
it is good practice to hold the ends of the threads behind the presser foot,
to ensure that they are not entangled in the stitching or pulled down the
needle hole.
(b) Stitch gently at first, increasing the speed gradually; you can use
the special slow speed if one is available on your machine. Keep your eye
on the presser foot and follow an edge or seamline—do not watch the needle.
(c) Let the fabric feed through at its own pace— do not pull it through.
The only exception to this is when you are sewing very bulky seams, when
the pressure can be slackened (consult the instruction book on the way to
do this) and the work carefully fed forwards.
5. While you are stitching. If you wish to turn a corner, or to rearrange
the work, be sure that the needle is down in the fabric before you raise
the presser foot.
6. When you reach the end of the work. Most sewing machines have a thread
cutter behind the presser foot. Stitch to the end of the fabric, lift the
take-up lever and draw the work backwards away from the presser foot. Cut
the threads to leave about 6 in. of thread on the end of the seam for tying,
and about 6 in. projecting from the needle eye and needle hole (so that when
you begin sewing again there will be no hold ups because of the needle becoming
unthreaded or the bobbin thread not operating).
Most machines will sew in reverse so that you can reverse back over the
stitches at the end of a seam, to avoid the need for fastening off thread
by knotting.
Whichever method you use for finishing ends of seams you should be sure
to snip off loose ends before going on to the next piece of sewing. Get into
the habit of doing it and it will never seem an irksome task. Leaving all
the ends hanging until the garment is almost finished is lazy dressmaking
practice.
The ‘difficult’ fabrics
There are some materials which present certain difficulties to the home
dressmaker, but usually they are easy enough to sew with a modern sewing
machine if you go about it the right way. Here are a few hints which may
help you:
LEATHER
Obviously you will not use a fine needle for leather, but make sure it is
not too thick either, or the needle may tear the leather. Use long stitches.
Very thick leather may need a special cutting needle which has a small knife
in the point, but most normal thicknesses of leather and suede, and most
imitation leather, do not need this special needle.
FOAM-BACK FABRICS
These may prove difficult to sew unless your machine offers a special roller
presser foot which is designed to allow the fabric to glide through. It is
also possible to buy a silicone spray for treating the surface over which
the fabric will slide. Both these help to prevent the foam plastic from clinging
to the presser foot and feed plate.
PVC (VINYL FABRIC)
Use large stitches. Some home dressmakers advocate the use of a fine smear
of oil or vase- line on the bed (or sewing surface) of the machine to help
the fabric to slide through easily; others recommend the use of talcum powder
sprinkled around the sewing area. Curves are difficult to sew on PVC unless
they are very gradual, and shaping, too, should be avoided as far as possible.
STRETCH FABRICS
As indicated elsewhere, stretch fabrics present few problems if you have
a zigzag machine, and even fewer if you have a fully-automatic machine which
allows you to use special ‘stretch stitches’ which will stitch and overcast
seams simultaneously. A synthetic sewing thread should normally be used.
OTHER SYNTHETIC MATERIALS
Use a fine needle and fine sewing thread. Most experts recommend the use
of synthetic sewing thread. Loosen the thread tension slightly. Use a long
stitch.
More about fabrics and fibers, together with sewing notes, can be found
in Section 6.
DECORATIVE WORK WITH A SEWING MACHINE
Hand embroidery is an art form which goes back thousands of years, and countless
generations of women have taken pleasure in creating embroidered articles.
However, since sewing machines have become more sophisticated, machine embroidery
has become for many people a hobby every bit as satisfying as hand embroidery,
with an almost limitless range of effects possible.
There are basically three ways of making designs with a sewing machine:
(a) By the use of ‘free-hand’ embroidery.
(b) By the use of the zigzag stitch in appliqué work.
(c) By the use of the patterns produced automatically by the sewing machine.
Free-hand embroidery
Once you have learned the knack, free-hand embroidery is possible with most
machines— even the older, straight—stitch ones. Consult your instruction
book to see what adjustments must be made. Usually the ‘feed dog’ which pushes
the fabric through the machine is disengaged. This may involve the feed being
dropped out of the way, or there may be a special cover plate which disengages
the feed dog.
The fabric is stretched over an embroidery hoop, and the operator manipulates
it while the needle sews. If you wish to produce anything elaborate, it is
obviously easier to do so with a swing-needle machine.
All sorts of effects can be achieved in free hand embroidery—it is possible
for example to produce a stitch very similar to the long-and— short stitch
used in hand embroidery, and if multicolored embroidery thread is used the
result is most attractive. But like any other art, free-hand embroidery is
a technique which must be learned by watching a skilled demonstrator, and
then practicing with diligence.
Appliqué work
This can be one of the most attractive forms of machine-sewn decoration,
and when sewing machine manufacturers have sample work on display at exhibitions
or in prominent stores, it is often the appliqué work which catches the eye.
It is frequently used for pictures and framed fire-screens, cushions and
table mats, and decorated garments for children.
However, it is worth remembering that appliqué is the least practical decoration
for washable articles, and is especially impracticable for children’s clothes.
Bibs, aprons, dresses and so on have to be washed so regularly that the appliqué
work may fray, particularly if, as is sensible, the mother likes to machine—wash
as many garments as possible. The same reasoning applies to appliqué for
table linen—it is pretty but impracticable, as the sort of washing which
will remove food stains will also, very probably, dislodge the appliquéd
fabric pieces, not to mention the color bleeding which may result from washing
in very hot water.
There are different methods of using the sewing machine for appliqué work.
One involves cutting out shapes from different fabrics to form the design,
then pressing them and tacking and stitching them in place, one at a time,
on the main fabric (or fixing them with adhesive, depending on the thickness
of the materials used). This is the traditional way of doing appliqué, except
that instead of hand- finishing, the zigzag satin stitch on the sewing machine
is used to secure and conceal all raw edges. Often a machine-embroidery hoop
is used. The other way is to mark the design out line on the back of the
main fabric and then to place the appliqué pieces on the right side. The
pieces are cut larger than the shapes they are to occupy, and are zigzag
stitched from the wrong side of the main fabric. The excess fabric is afterwards
cut away on the right side very care fully, with fine scissors. The whole
appliqué design is built up piece by piece.
Any scraps of fabric, from sheer organdie to thick tweed, can be used to
form delightful designs. If you wish, you can ornament the appliqué pieces
themselves with one or more of the automatic embroidery stitches if they
are available on your machine. For example the petals and leaves of a flower
formed from various pieces of fabric may be further embellished with a decorative
stitch to form veining and shading. This, incidentally also helps to strengthen
the work further.
Automatic embroidery
If you are going to have automatically embroidered patterns on a garment—for
example a blouse or a child’s dress — it will be much easier if you do the
embroidery before you make up the garment (unless you plan to use the automatic
pattern to embroider decorative seams).
Experiment first using odd scraps of the same fabric, folded double, to
see which pattern or combination of patterns would best suit the purpose,
and to check tension, stitch width and stitch length.
Before you start to stitch it is advisable to mark very precisely the lines
along which you will be sewing, using faint pencil on fabrics that are washable,
and tailor’s chalk on thicker and darker fabrics. If two sides of a garment
are to be embellished, measure carefully to ensure that the pattern runs
symmetrically, and meets exactly where necessary.
Always use identical embroidery thread for top threading and bobbin threading.
Machine-embroidered patterns look better on double fabric, and if the material
is fine, slip a sheet of typing paper under the fabric too, before you stitch
it, to prevent the design from puckering. The paper is afterwards torn off,
and any that remains will be washed out when the article is laundered.
When you begin a line of pattern, do not begin right at the edge of the
fabric, or the raw edges at that point may be drawn down into the needle
hole and thus flaw your work. Instead begin at least in. from the edge of
the fabric.
Make sure, before you begin sewing a long line of automatic pattern, that
there is enough embroidery thread on both the spool and the bobbin. If the
thread should run out before you have finished, however, it is possible to
blend in the continuation in the following way:
Remove the work. Take a matching strip of material, re—thread the machine
and sew the pattern until you come to the exact place where the stitching
ended before. Stop there, raise the needle and remove the material. Put back
the original work, making sure that the needle is positioned on the correct
side of the pattern so that it will take up the design again, and continue
to sew. Some machines have an automatic indicator which enables you to connect
up the pattern instantly, and the procedure described will not then be necessary.
When you finish a line of pattern, always draw the thread through to the
back of the work and tie carefully, making sure not to pull as you make the
knot. Snip off the ends.
Machine—made patterns can be useful as well as decorative. A number of automatic
patterns are ideal for finishing off edges of tablecloths and napkins, and
seams can also be finished with embroidery stitches for a pleasing effect—
a particular advantage because it avoids the need for seam-finishing.
To sum up: advice on the sort of embroidery which is possible with each
type of machine should be sought before you make the purchase, as some models
are more versatile than others. It is almost always best to have a machine
with a three-position needle.
I would suggest you ask the demonstrator for special tuition on the kind
of embroidery in which you are interested. Many machine manufacturers make
a particular point of training their demonstrators in advanced techniques
of decorative work.
Once you have the knack yourself, you will probably find that your enthusiasm
increases and you will want to find new designs to make up. It may be possible
to adapt designs which were intended for hand embroidery: the transfer is
ironed on to the fabric in exactly the same way. The specialist needlework
magazines include designs for machine embroidery from time to time, and the
Embroiderers’ Guild (or the Embroiderers’ Guild American Branch Inc.) also
produce designs suitable for machine em broidery.
CARE AND MAINTENANCE OF THE SEWING MACHINE
When you use a sewing machine you should give it the care and attention
which are essential to keep it in good running order at all times. Here are
the main rules to follow.
1. Cleaning: Keep the machine clean, by dusting off lint and fluff which
collect around the moving parts of the machine. A small lint brush moment—perhaps
when you are in the middle of a big sewing job and cannot get to the shops.
MINOR BREAKDOWNS
Major breakdowns obviously need professional attention, but not every breakdown
is so drastic: the majority of faults are minor, and caused, very often,
by misuse.
The following check list gives a selection of causes for failure. Run through
them before calling in the service mechanic. You may be able to put the trouble
right yourself.
If the machine will not work at all…
* Check whether the electricity supply is getting through (does the electric
light on the machine work?). If not, check the wiring of the electric plug,
and if this is in order change the cartridge fuse (2 cartridge needed).
* Check whether the lead plug is properly connected with the machine—press
it home fully.
If the machine will not move the fabric, but stitches on a single point…
* Check whether the feed dog is disengaged (as though for darning or free-hand
embroidery).
* Check whether a loose thread is caught on the presser foot.
If the needle breaks…
* The needle may have been bent or blunt.
* The needle may have been inserted wrongly. It may for example not have
been pushed into the needle clamp as far as it could go.
* You may have been pulling the fabric through instead of letting it pass
under the presser foot at its own pace.
* You may have used the wrong size needle for the thread and material you
are sewing.
* You may have machined across too thick a seam (for example an intersecting
seam on thick fabric), using too small a needle.
* The needle may have struck a wrongly fastened presser foot or attachment.
If the bobbin thread breaks
* The bobbin thread may have been threaded incorrectly.
* The bobbin thread tension may have been too tight, and out of balance
with the upper tension.
* There may have been a knot in the bobbin thread.
* The bobbin may have been wound unevenly so that an overlapping thread
trapped the free end.
If the needle thread breaks…
* The needle may have been blunt or bent.
* The machine may have been threaded wrongly; look again at the threading
guide.
* The upper tension may have been too tight.
* There may have been a knot in the needle thread.
* The needle may not have been inserted fully into the needle clamp.
* The needle thread may have been too thick for the needle.
* The needle thread may have been too fine for the fabric.
If the top of the work looks normal while the back is a mass of tangled
thread
* The bobbin was probably inserted wrongly. Re-thread, carefully checking
the threading sequence and the position of the thread end. Use a seam unpicker
to remove the tangled threads.
If the whole machine jams, and needle and bobbin become immovable...
* Do not attempt to force the machine to work, either by operating the foot
control or manipulating by hand. Disconnect the machine from the electricity
supply and if the fabric is still in the machine, gently extricate it if
possible by removing needle and fabric together. Then try, gently, to remove
the bobbin case from the machine. There may be a piece of cotton jamming
it. Clean out the area as much as possible, following the manufacturer’s
instructions for cleaning, and re-thread the machine carefully. Re-insert
the needle and re-connect with the electricity supply.
If the trouble cannot be righted, or persists, the fault will probably need
professional attention.
If the machine misses stitches from time to time…
* The needle may be in backwards.
* The needle may be inserted wrongly in the clamp; position it as high as
it will go.
* The machine may be threaded incorrectly.
* The needle may be the wrong type for the machine—perhaps too short. Always
use the recommended needle.
* The thread may be too thick for the fabric.
If the machine is sluggish…
* It is probably dirty, or needs oiling, or both.
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