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My 3 Must Have Sewing Machine Features – Hipstitch Academy

My 3 Must Have Sewing Machine Features

I’ve never really been too picky about what machines our adult sewing students are allowed to sew on in our classes. If you’ve got an old vintage singer from your grandmother, you should learn how to use it!

You’re more than welcome to bring it and use it in any of our classes, as long as it is in working order!  We’ll teach you how to thread it and use it! No sense getting a brand new one right away if you’ve got a working machine at home. Older sewing machines usually pretty heavy duty and there’s just something really fun & nostalgic about them.

Back in some of our first sewing classes, we literally had a mish-mash of old and new sewing machines that we taught our sewing classes on. We started our business on a shoestring, so whatever machines we could get our hands on, as long as they were operating, we’d use them in our sewing classes. We didn’t have the money to purchase all of one kind of sewing machines until a few years later!

But after we did start teaching classes on all of one kind of sewing machine, we realized pretty quickly how much easier it is to teach when every one has the same sewing machine!

We also learned about a few features of the sewing machine we can no longer live without when teaching sewing classes, especially classes for kids. And they’re somewhat surprising things we didn’t give much thought to before.

Here they are:

1. Needle up button


needle_up

It’s funny because I’ve always worked on old sewing machines with no fancy features. When I’m attending sewing trade shows, in a sewing machine shop or when my students bring in the fancier models that have all kinds of automatic features, in all honestly I really don’t get that excited!

 

It all just seems to me like a bunch of extra stuff you don’t need. It’s similar to the way I feel about having a lot of different sewing gadgets and tools. They just take up extra space and you almost always can make-do without them.

 

But when I learned how great it was to have that “Needle-up Button” on the sewing machine, my life was forever changed.

Here’s the reason.

On a regular, non-fancy sewing machine, the flywheel makes the needle go up and down. If you teach your students to turn it towards you, you’re good to go. But for whatever that isn’t always natural for a new sewing student! Often new sewing students:

  1.  Turn the fly wheel away from you (the wrong way), which most sewing machines hate!
  2. Or they turn the flywheel part of the way (up or down) leaving the needle somewhere between up and down. When you then try to pull your project away to cut the threads, there are three or four threads there (?) or it feels hard to pull away because it’s tangled inside the sewing machine.

If you teach you students to utilize the needle up/down button, these problems are eliminated and you may even hear a choir of angels singing in then background of your sewing class.

2. Automatic Speed control

speed_control

This is also another one of these features where you don’t realize how essential it is until you use it!

OMG – I can no longer teach kids how to sew without the feauture. And believe me, I just tried last week! We do a lot of off-site classes and I tend to try to leave machines at the schools we teach at. I was low on machines when it came for this class to start. I brought a couple of machines I had in the studio from before we started using the SB700t for most of our classes. I had an older model brother & my trusty tank of a Bernina from the 80’s. Of course this class was super young and most had not sewn before. We got through the first 1 hour of class, but I’ll be purchasing a couple of machines with the speed control before I teach there again this week.

Not having the ability to start them off really slow is completely nerve wracking as a teacher. They don’t have the necessary foot control to make the speed slow and steady. And while I have done it before (hundreds of times) knowing what I now know, it’s just easier to pick up a few more machines to not have the stress of teaching on a machine that vrooms out of control the minute the kids foot hits the pedal.

3. That the machine doesn’t sew when the presser foot is up.

presser_footPretty self explanatory, but another one that doesn’t become crystal clear until you get used to sewing on a machine that wont go unless the presser foot is up.

 

Hindsight is 20/20 they say, but wow! Try going back to teaching on a machine that will happily work even when the presser foot is up?! Ugh, the worst! All the threads getting tangled & the chance for little fingers to slide under the raised presser foot are far to great! It’s enough to make you go out and purchase a couple more machines with this feature before teaching again with the ones that don’t have it.

 

On that note, I’m going to close this blog post and immediately head to my local brother dealership, Rocks Paper Scissors in Monthclair NJ ! I need two machines for the little fingered class I’ll be teaching at 3pm. Have a great weekend, y’all!