Thanks Mike and Lumpen. really useful advice there.
I'm thinking about early retirement (approaching 56) and have played around with saddle stitching and making a few belts and wet formed bags so was toying with the idea of giving myself something to do when i pack work in to stop me turning into something from the veg rack.
I have no intention of selling anything tbh, just making stuff for fun really. Hence why I do not want to go mad on the price.
The reason I'm looking into a sewing machine is. I love the therapeutic element of hand saddle stitching a thick leather belt but the thought of messing around doing it on 1 to 1.5 mm thick veg leather stuck in a clam with a wallet and all its fiddly elements puts me off a bit. I would much rather design a pattern, cut it out, do the edges, run it through a sewing machine and then do a bit of trim on it such as press studs etc. I'm 6'4 and 19 stone so you can imagine the shovels I've got for hands! Homer don't do fiddly
Your posts have made me wonder about two things now -
1. The servo motor thing. Does a servo motor make it so you can have it sew really slowly and get faster the more you press the control? Are these difficult / expensive to fit as this sounds a much better approach.
2. The top and bottom feed bit - I have no idea what that is on about. Is that the feed of the thread or the leather? Why is it important enough to comment on?
Cheers again for the advice.folks much appreciated. I've got hundreds of pounds worth of tools upstairs and three dead cows in the spare room waiting to be cunningly fashioned into something.
Mike - LOVE Brittany. We usually drift down there every year in our motor home and drink gallons of cheap pampelmousse rose wine from Aldi.
Paul