I'm in Love
#1
I needed to sew on four buttons onto a block and was dreading it as I would rather drink poison than sew on buttons. But wait I have a fancy sewing machine that is suppose to sew on buttons!! Yea, right, probably need to totally disassemble the machine to make it happen. So drag out the old manual (which in itself is a miracle that I can even find it as I DON'T READ MANUALS!)
I just sewed on four buttons in about 2 minutes. Drop feed dogs, put on right foot, select right stitch, Viola!! Done!!
I LOVE technology...
I just sewed on four buttons in about 2 minutes. Drop feed dogs, put on right foot, select right stitch, Viola!! Done!!
I LOVE technology...
#3
Power Poster
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: Michigan
Posts: 11,276
I use this stitch selection for bar tacks all the time. I don't lower the feed dogs for this. When I make a obw, or stack and whack, I pin the layers, then bar tack the whole thing. I cut the pieces on my accucut so this way I don't need to worry about the blades hitting a pin. I really think that it keeps the layers from shifing, and it's easy to clip the tack when you start piecing.
#5
Originally Posted by PaperPrincess
I use this stitch selection for bar tacks all the time. I don't lower the feed dogs for this. When I make a obw, or stack and whack, I pin the layers, then bar tack the whole thing. I cut the pieces on my accucut so this way I don't need to worry about the blades hitting a pin. I really think that it keeps the layers from shifing, and it's easy to clip the tack when you start piecing.
#7
( So drag out the old manual (which in itself is a miracle that I can even find it as I DON'T READ MANUALS!)
Same here although I keep the manuals to my machines with the machines. So do I open them and read them? NO!
Was a little embarssing when the sewing repair guy left a note on the Pfaff I brought in for repair, note said "Read your manual". I had upgraded my old Pfaff for a newer model but couldn't change the feet, turned out if I had read the manual I would have known that this newer model required me to push the even feed lever back to change the feet.
If I didn't make mistakes I wouldn't learn anything new and believe me I'm learning new things every day.
Same here although I keep the manuals to my machines with the machines. So do I open them and read them? NO!
Was a little embarssing when the sewing repair guy left a note on the Pfaff I brought in for repair, note said "Read your manual". I had upgraded my old Pfaff for a newer model but couldn't change the feet, turned out if I had read the manual I would have known that this newer model required me to push the even feed lever back to change the feet.
If I didn't make mistakes I wouldn't learn anything new and believe me I'm learning new things every day.
#10
That is Dally, also a rescue. I have 3 heelers, 2 of them rescue. I founded and ran a heeler rescue for 3 years and I'm lucky 2 was all I ended up with. There were a bunch more that I would have kept if I had the room. I got Dally at 5 weeks, sick, skinny but he is a big dog now and healthy. Definitely a handful but he is getting better the older he gets.
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