just for the sake of going OLD SCHOOL...
#1
just for the sake of going OLD SCHOOL...
have any of you ever successfully used hand spun thread in a sewing machine. or I should say Home spun, drop spindle Spinning wheel I don't care how how it was made, just the fact that a regular person outside of a factory made it. I mean I see a lot of people thinking Wow when the grid goes down I am gonna have a treadle. well I have heard tell that old weird or uneven thread gives dreadful results and I don't see Amazon or Hobby lobby being n alternative in a "grid down" situation. as all of the old machines I have been around seem to use "factory" thread I am thinking thread was a commodity before machines ?
#2
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Phenix City, Alabama
Posts: 881
Never done it but have thought about it. Not sure how it would work for a machine tho. I can see uneven thickness or blobs playing havoc with a needle. I'm pretty sure thread was sold on spools before machines came along. Gonna do some Googling I think.
#3
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Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: Phenix City, Alabama
Posts: 881
#4
Senior Member
Join Date: Aug 2012
Posts: 786
Fingering weight yarn is the thinnest I've heard someone hand spin. It's great for knitting socks but it would difficult to use for machine stitching. I don't know of a needle eye large enough and I would think it would cause tension issues as well.
#7
Member
Join Date: May 2015
Posts: 37
You can spin finer than fingering weight. And people spin yarn for weaving warp all the time. I'd think you'd have better luck spinning flax for thread. Longer fibers and strong, it should also be possible to spin it fine and even enough. Silk would be a good choice too.
I'd try using those top stitching needles, with a larger eye. Good luck!
I'd try using those top stitching needles, with a larger eye. Good luck!
#8
Super Member
Join Date: Oct 2013
Location: Centralia, WA, USA
Posts: 4,890
People were making fine thread for hand sewing and for weaving cloth long before sewing machines were around. I don't know if it was a home type of spinning operation or if more specialized machines were needed though.
Rodney
Rodney
#9
Member
Join Date: May 2015
Posts: 37
I do have a friend that did a series of embroidery. She spun up various types of wild silk, then embroidered a picture of the moth that created the silk. Very neat stuff and they did an article for it in Spin Off.
Cotton is a short fiber and it's hard to spin it as fine as you need for thread. It likes to be spun fine, but still hard to do. That's why I'd go with silk or linen.
Cotton is a short fiber and it's hard to spin it as fine as you need for thread. It likes to be spun fine, but still hard to do. That's why I'd go with silk or linen.
#10
that is kinda what I was thinking, people have been spinning THREAD, for a long time,( I mean linen cloth is not made from yarn ) I have also heard that even OLD machine made cotton thread plays havoc with machines... so I was wondering if the "lumpy" had spun ever stood a chance or if it was ever common, I see now where the earliest large scale mills roughly coincide with machine introduction... so my chances of ever making it work are pretty slim.
Maybe I should raise some of them Golden Orb spiders... or the mutant spider goats ( google it its fun )
Maybe I should raise some of them Golden Orb spiders... or the mutant spider goats ( google it its fun )
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