Thread question
#21
Super Member
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Tulsa, Oklahoma
Posts: 4,413
Originally Posted by cjtinkle
My machine will sew with anything, but my favorite piecing thread is Presencia 60wt 3 ply cotton. Harriet Hargrave recommends it as well.
Superior Threads makes a very nice cast iron thread stand you can use with any sewing machine, I have one for each of my machines as I always use large cones of thread... as you said, much more economical.
http://www.superiorthreads.com/shop/...ndcone-holder/
Superior Threads makes a very nice cast iron thread stand you can use with any sewing machine, I have one for each of my machines as I always use large cones of thread... as you said, much more economical.
http://www.superiorthreads.com/shop/...ndcone-holder/
#23
Originally Posted by Japonica
I am headed to my last quilting class :cry: and will ask this question there also but wanted to check with all you experts. what is the best type of thread? I don't have a machine that uses cone thread (would love to figure out a way to be able to use it though, less costly). This morning I was sewing together some blocks for a rag quilt to hone my non existent sewing skills and the thread keeps breaking off the needle after a while. I checked the tension, threading of the machine, etc., and all seem to be correct. My thread I am using a a quilting thread purchased at Joann's and it is Americana 100% Glazed Cotton. Does the "Glazed" have something to do with jamming my machine and breaking the thread? I so need a quilting mommy!!! :roll:
#27
Super Member
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Somewhere in Time
Posts: 2,697
For cone thread, I use a pint canning jar with glass marbles in the bottom (just enough to allow the cone to remain stable and flexible) . One woman in our quilt group winds extra bobbins and puts them in the bottom of the jar for stability so she always has a wound bottom when she needs one.
When I first joined my quilting group I had to purchase a machine, fabric, and other notions -- there wasn't money left over to purchase a cone holder (and I had no idea where to find one) so I grabbed what I had -- a canning jar, but it just didn't work, so I added the glass marbles that I used in vases and that worked -- no money spent.
When I first joined my quilting group I had to purchase a machine, fabric, and other notions -- there wasn't money left over to purchase a cone holder (and I had no idea where to find one) so I grabbed what I had -- a canning jar, but it just didn't work, so I added the glass marbles that I used in vases and that worked -- no money spent.
#28
Junior Member
Join Date: Aug 2010
Posts: 292
Thread on cones. ? My husband (who isn't a finish person) took
a block of wood, put a BIG nail in it , put a thin piece of PVC pipe
over the nail , took a wire coat hanger and bent it so it would
hold the thread off the spool . It works terrific. I have some
cones to use too. I have a huge one of white I've been using for years and trying to get it gone.
GOOD LUCK
FLO in NYState
a block of wood, put a BIG nail in it , put a thin piece of PVC pipe
over the nail , took a wire coat hanger and bent it so it would
hold the thread off the spool . It works terrific. I have some
cones to use too. I have a huge one of white I've been using for years and trying to get it gone.
GOOD LUCK
FLO in NYState
#29
Yes, I agree with everyone on the board. Mettler or Gutterman and the thread from Connect Threads Online work great! Please never use glaced thread in the machine. It will do damage to the machine over time. Also, the size needle has a lot to do with the correct 'workings' of the machine. If everything is working correctly, you'll hear a humm to your machine as you sew!!
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
CorgiNole
Main
16
06-12-2010 01:38 PM