Why does my fabric keep "walking" to the right as I sew?
#2
Mine does that too and this is my conclusion on the reason.
By the time I sew all the way down, by the time I get almost to the end, I release the pressure of my hands onto the quilt and I know that it is because I am right at the end and glad that strip is finished especially if its a long strip. When I would hold the same amount of pressure, It didn't go to the right.
By the time I sew all the way down, by the time I get almost to the end, I release the pressure of my hands onto the quilt and I know that it is because I am right at the end and glad that strip is finished especially if its a long strip. When I would hold the same amount of pressure, It didn't go to the right.
#4
Power Poster
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: Western Wisconsin
Posts: 12,930
This can be caused by the machine. It just requires an adjustment of the feed dogs.
To test if it's the machine, take a large scrap of fabric and sew without your hands guiding the fabric. If it pulls to one side and starts making a large circle, the feed dogs are not feeding the fabric correctly. A good tech should be able to make the adjustment for even feeding.
To test if it's the machine, take a large scrap of fabric and sew without your hands guiding the fabric. If it pulls to one side and starts making a large circle, the feed dogs are not feeding the fabric correctly. A good tech should be able to make the adjustment for even feeding.
#5
Originally Posted by Prism99
This can be caused by the machine. It just requires an adjustment of the feed dogs.
To test if it's the machine, take a large scrap of fabric and sew without your hands guiding the fabric. If it pulls to one side and starts making a large circle, the feed dogs are not feeding the fabric correctly. A good tech should be able to make the adjustment for even feeding.
To test if it's the machine, take a large scrap of fabric and sew without your hands guiding the fabric. If it pulls to one side and starts making a large circle, the feed dogs are not feeding the fabric correctly. A good tech should be able to make the adjustment for even feeding.
#6
Well, now I've located an authorized service center for Brother sewing machines. The nearest one is only 32 miles away, so I'll call tomorrow and tell them my problem. Hopefully they can fix it quickly! I only have the one machine and I NEED to be piecing quilt tops!
#7
Super Member
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: IL
Posts: 2,671
Well, first see if the feed dogs are packed with lint. Take off the throat plate and vacuum (preferably) or brush it out. Also run it with the plate off (no thread or fabric) and see if the movement is obviously off. All my machines run pretty straight, even the budget-priced Brother. I had a 1990's Singer which behaved as you are describing. I thought my frustrations were my fault until I finally upgraded!
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post