Adding to the 'stuff'
Sep. 28th, 2009 04:53 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)

So, freecycle Slough finally came up trumps, and in our kitchen sits a sewing machine. I've been trying to find one for *ages* - mostly for Kathryn, because frankly my sewing is laughable. But occasionally it's seemed like we could do with a machine. I was hoping to pick up an ancient singer with the hand-crank. This would be easily transferable to Canada but after countless lost auctions (and annoyingly never by much) I'd kind of stopped poking. And then this came up.
The Alfa 50 sewing machine. I've no idea of it's exact age, but it's an external motor/belt driven whatsit. It's in need of a thorough clean but after lord knows how many years in the shed I checked it all turned over and moved okay - plugged it in, and pressing the foot pedal spurred it into life.
I'm quite impressed. It does, however, weigh the same as an African elephant.
I'm hoping that Kathryn knows how to thread it too, because to me sewing machines essentially look like a way to generate a cat's cradle very quickly. She, however, is possessed of clue on the whole 'sewing machine' issue, and therefore there is a possibility that she could just by the power of her mind discover the correct routing for thread.
Otherwise it seems to be about a fiver for the manual - downloaded...
Anyhow, Kathryn's home now...
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Date: 2009-09-28 04:42 pm (UTC)The Haynes manual for them is a little yellow thing from TAB Books, called "How to fettle your entire sewing machine, no, really, you've got an MZ and a bunch of Dafs, how much harder could it be?" As most maintenance is basically cleaning away fluff and only ever oiling with the _lightest_ of spots of oil (also fresh needles and good quality thread), it's really not that scary.
Which I why I have nearly as many half-fettled sewing machine projects in the shed as I do cars. Hmmm....
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Date: 2009-09-29 06:36 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-09-29 12:24 pm (UTC)They do need a light touch though! The only real maintenance that's practical is cleaning out the dust bunnies (artist's paintbrush), but that's all they almost-always ever need. If your hooky-wook (technical term there) really has worn beyond serviceability then the difference in shape might be too subtle to ever see it and you just need to buy a new one. Practicality of that depends on parts sourcing and age (anything "industrial" seems to be available forever, anything "domestic" is an utter pain). In practice, very few machines are used enough to get that far, so you're only ever at the "clean it and it'll be fine" stage.
I think I've acquired 5 machines by now, plus Rachel's, but only one is set up & working (but two hundred miles away!). The two good ones just need setup, but I live in hope of getting a proper sewing room organised and they've been waiting for years now. In the meantime I tend to cheat and go use
Needles do make a surprising difference, as does good quality (non-fluffy) thread. Get a pack of mixed needles, at least a 5-pack of each likely size, and don't be afraid to either swap to the right size for the fabric or swap out a blunted one. I buy this sort of thing from Morplan, who have a moderate minimum-order as they're trade, but they're cheap for thread if you have a big project (lovely, lovely Mundial scissors too).