Showing posts with label Sewing machines. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sewing machines. Show all posts

SOS! Need help dating a vintage machine!

OK, folks, I need some help dating one of my vintage machines and getting some spare parts.

The specs:
  • "New Home Light Running Rotary" in a cabinet.
  • Serial no. is ALB201 which means it was manufactured by Free but badged "New Home".
  • I have the original "Guarantag" dated Feb 20, 1951 but no model number. I'm looking to find the date of manufacture, not date of sale.
  • A mark that looks like an arrowhead with an "8" underneath also appears on the machine.
  • The machine is goldtone and is electric powered with a Westinghouse motor
I need to acquire:
  • New automatic bobbin winder rubber wheelie - the rubber is completely rotted
  • Rubber wheelie thingy that goes from the motor to drive the handwheel - there's a groove in the rubber that causes major slippage
I'm refreshing my vintage machines, so I can use them again and I've hit a wall here.

Treadle machine in Columbus, OH

For those of you residing in central Ohio, yesterday I discovered a White treadle sewing machine in the Volunteers of America thrift store on Indianola Avenue. The cabinet was in rough shape, but the machine looked really good. I didn't see a price, but I was purposely not looking too hard. :)

I couldn't justify getting it, no matter how much I wanted it, but I thought someone else might be interested!

(The store is open today, July 4.)

dreamy sewing

My friend Zephorah and I love to sew, SO we decided to do a vintage inspired shoot, with my fab Montgomery Ward Signature machine from 1971. Check out a dreamy interview with Zephorah and more photos on my blog.




model: zephorah photos: lesley w. dress: 16 Stone vintage

"New" sewing machine

I found this sewing machine over the weekend:



The brand is called Koyo and it's Japanese. It works perfectly and I was very happy to find that it has a foot for doing blind hems. I haven't been able to find any information on the brand, though, so if anyone knows anything about it, I'd love to know.

Feel free to visit my blog :)

- Leyla

Beauty in the Basement: A Vintage Singer Unearthed!



96 years old, and she still has perfect tension!


My parents' basement flooded recently and in the process of mucking it out, my mother came across a beautiful Vintage Singer. She didn't remember its source at first, and my Bobie (grandmother) didn't think it was hers either.

But after some thought and digging around in her own basement, Bobie realized that it was indeed her first sewing machine, the one she learned to sew on in the 1950s--she even found the thread, bobbins and projects she had for it, and the table she had it installed in. She apologized for not recognizing it instantly--but I told her that when you're 87, you're allowed to forget things occasionally!

So here's the story, as she recalls it: she didn't do much sewing at home, or right after she was married (in August 1944)--and soon, she had four young kids to take care of in a small apartment, not leaving her much free time. She did do some crocheting and knitting, however, like this lovely baby blanket she made for my Aunt Elissa in 1947, and which has now been passed down to me for my little girl (due in 7-11 weeks). (Sorry for the weird cropping, but I was making a bizarre face!):

Baby blanket crocheted by my Bobie in 1947


Eventually they moved to a bigger house and she decided to learn to sew dresses for her two daughters--who had particular ideas about what they wanted to wear, unlike my dad!--and clothes for herself. She thinks she got the machine from her family, and that they had had it for quite a few years before that. When she upgraded to a newer machine many years later, she gave the old Singer to my parents, and into the basement it went.

Here's a photo of Sylvia (that's her name, by the way--Sylvia Katler, born Sylvia Fishman) in the 1940s looking sharp in her Coast Guard uniform--she's on the right, and that's her sister Sarah and brother Milton. Most of her nine brothers and sisters were also in the service during WWII (Milton was too young, but served in the Korean War).



Here are some photos of her with my grandfather Leon Katler, also from the 1940s--don't they look glamorous?





And here they are in 1947 as new parents:



Here's a picture of the four kids with Leon from the 1950s, but I don't know if she sewed that dress (and I can't tell which is my dad and which is his brother, they looked a lot alike back then!):



Here's a recent photo of me and Sylvia at my baby shower, with my grandmothers-in-law Theresa and Wilhelmina!



And should you be interested, in college I put together a short collection of some family stories she told me about her life growing up in old Jewish Boston, her time in the Coast Guard during World War II, and beyond.

I at first assumed it was a 1930s or 1940s model, but my blog readers tipped me off to the serial-number lookup on Singer's website--they even had a PDF of the instruction manual. It's a Model 66 (G-Series), manufactured at the Elizabethport Factory in Elizabeth, New Jersey in 1914, along with 25,000 others of the same model.

As you might guess, it was originally treadle-operated, but at some point before my grandmother got it it was retrofitted with a motor and electric foot pedal.

My mother Beryl took it for a test drive (see her photo gallery here) and reports it has perfect tension. Sadly she lives 5 hours away, and I'm too close to delivery to want to travel anymore... so I probably won't lay my hands on this beauty until well after Cartoonist Baby arrives!

Luckily this reminded me that my good friend Mary has a similar machine right here in Brooklyn, so maybe I can play with hers.

No offense to my computerized Viking and her 60+ stitches, but I doubt she'll still be in service in the year 2101... and she was never this pretty!

New vintage Singer 99k

I had to share this with you all because I knew you'd appreciate it.

I picked up this Singer 99k circa 1956 at an estate sale yesterday for $40 USD! It's in great shape and runs like a dream.


Sorry for the poor photo quality, my husband had our camera and all I had was my Blackberry.

I also got this Marian Martin pattern in the mail this week and am dying to make it up with a pencil skirt in stead (adjusting the lines of the skirt a little shouldn't be too hard? right?)

I think it would be so much fun to sew this pattern on that machine.

I'm Going to Call Her Betty


My husband brought this gorgeous sewing machine home last Friday. He got it at a local thrift shop for $20!!! All it needs is a good cleaning and a new belt. I can't wait for him to fix her us so that I can really start sewing retro style.

I've got the close ups on my blog.

Sewing machine woes!

So my machine s broken. Totally crazy. Cleaned it, had it in pieces & still, it will nt work properly, so it's being returned. Which will leave me sans sewing machine. GAH!

On a brighter note, I am attending a couple of 40s weekends & ordered these patterns to complete my outfit




I'm a sucker for hats so I can't wait to get that one! Perhaps B's mama will let me borrow her machine...

xdollydaydreamx

Sewing deadline

I am the type of person who needs a deadline to work against (which is why I just finished my taxes today.) When I have an event to get a project done for, no problem, I start early and work diligently until it is done. But in absence of any looming drop-dead date, my sewing projects just linger, and linger. So I am going to use this group to hold me accountable to finishing this project.

This piece of fabric is vintage Hawaiian print feedsack from my stash. I bought it at a flea market. The pattern isn't vintage, but it is typical of the type of garment that might have been made from chicken linen. (I wrote an entire chapter in my graduate thesis on feedsacks.)

I am moving in just 3 weeks, and I am NOT going to pack an UFO. My goal is to have finished product before the end of April... INCLUDING doing the buttonholes (which I despise doing.)
Can I do it?

Oh, and it will be sewn on my circa 1958 Elna Supermatic (green one with knee bar), a hand-me-down from my mother. If I get this done I am going to treat myself to a NEW MACHINE (gasp!), paid for with that tax refund. Any recommendations on machines?