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DrmCa

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Posts posted by DrmCa


  1. 3 hours ago, Rylando said:

    I thought for whatever reason that 135x17 was the size of needle my machine took

    This is the correct system and size. Just the point is wrong. You need the LR point that slices through leather, in the same size and system, but the round textile point that you currently have rips it apart. You could get away with it on soft, upholstery leather but you are SOL with the leather that you have. Keep the needles and buy a few packs of LR.


  2. My Singer that we use for the most difficult of the areas on heavy textiles is from the late 1800s and my grand-grand-mother-in-law used it before the end of that century, to stitch trench coats. Still runs like new.

    My aunt has another one like it, complete with a cast-iron base. It's my grand-grand-mother's, and she used it back around 1890, to stitch for the whole family. Still runs like new.


  3. You can adjust the needle bar height for a shorter needle but if you go too far the needle shank may strike the material, or the needle bar may strike the raised foot during the bobbin winding. People adjust their needle bars all the time, to save a buck. As long as you can get away with it, and your budget is too tight, who can stop you?


  4. Recently, I picked up from a roadside a perfect working Kenmore similar to yours. It came on a table, with a few button sewing kits, lots of accessories, bobbins, needles, feet, threads, and manuals. The maximum I would have ever paid for a used (and your machine is used, no matter what the seller is saying) machine, had I been hard pressed to buy one, would have probably been $40. I gave this machine to my mum. It's her 3d such machine. The previous two were a Brother and a Singer that I also found in cases, with bobbins, feet, etc.

    As to whether it can stitch leather, yes, it can stitch the lightest of leathers, under certain conditions. You may have luck with a roller foot, if you have lots of experience. For a beginner, a walking foot industrial machine is a must. Buy a good used flatbed machine for around $300 or cylinder arm for around $600, and it will serve you for many years to come.


  5. 4 hours ago, nylonRigging said:

    This one, I turned the needle bar 45 deg. to put the set screw in foreword position, from it being on the R-side .

    I ended up going to the industrial machine shop earlier today and getting exactly the same thread guide and screw as in your picture. Now mine looks just like yours, except that my needle bar is still in its factory position;

    In my case, I cannot turn it, as if I did, the bulky material that I saw might rub on the left side of the needle bar and catch the thread. It happened a few times while I did not have the needle guide. Now it stitches 100% reliable. I do not use it for leather, only for fabrics. Leather is the purview of my Pfaff walking foot.

    The old one must have come from a different kind of machine that has longer needles.

    May I ask? What's up with the green throat plate and feed dog? They look unusual.

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