Anyone else have one?
I was in an antique/secondhand store over the weekend, and they had four for sale - a Singer, a White, one with an Italian name, but made in Japan, and another with just letters and numbers but no name. All about the same price (150 - 200 dollars). I have always wanted a treadle for some reason, though I have never used one. I learned to sew on my mother's Singer Featherweight, and loved that machine, but of course it was electric. I just love the looks of the old machines. Modern machines may do more, but they have lost the elegance of the older models. So I thought about it for awhile, and succumbed
. I chose the Singer, assuming that parts etc. would be easier to find. After a bit of internet research I find that my "new" machine was built in 1906, and, indeed, parts, and manuals, are relatively easy to find. In fact, I was able to print out the user's manual from the internet. It needs a bit of clean up, and oiling, but appears to be all there. There were no accessories included, but there are four long, skinny bobbins.
I have had a very basic model electric machine from Montgomery Ward for the last 30+ years. It still does its job, and I won't be tossing it away, but it has no decorative value whatsoever. I am really looking forward to getting to know the Singer. (This is really basic - it only goes forward, no reverse)
I was in an antique/secondhand store over the weekend, and they had four for sale - a Singer, a White, one with an Italian name, but made in Japan, and another with just letters and numbers but no name. All about the same price (150 - 200 dollars). I have always wanted a treadle for some reason, though I have never used one. I learned to sew on my mother's Singer Featherweight, and loved that machine, but of course it was electric. I just love the looks of the old machines. Modern machines may do more, but they have lost the elegance of the older models. So I thought about it for awhile, and succumbed
I have had a very basic model electric machine from Montgomery Ward for the last 30+ years. It still does its job, and I won't be tossing it away, but it has no decorative value whatsoever. I am really looking forward to getting to know the Singer. (This is really basic - it only goes forward, no reverse)