This page will contain additional articles about sewing machines, as they become available.Sewing machineA modern electronically-controlled sewing machine (Singer Symphonie 300)A sewing machine is a mechanical (or electromechanical) device that joins fabrics with thread. Sewing machines make a stitch, called a sewing-machine stitch, usually using two threads, although machines exist that stitch using one, three, four or more threads. Sewing machines can make a great variety of plain or patterned stitches. They include means for gripping, supporting, and conveying the fabric past the sewing needle to form the stitch pattern. Most home sewing machines and many industrial machines use a two-thread stitch called the lockstitch. Some older machine types are chain stitch machines and sergers. The fabric shifting mechanism may be a simple work guide or may be pattern-controlled, e.g., Jacquard-type. Some machines can create embroidery-type stitches. Some have a work holder frame. Some have a work feeder that can move along a curved path, while others have a work feeder with a work clamp. History of the sewing machineTreadle-powered Singer sewing machine and standBefore the invention of a usable machine for sewing or dress design, everything was sewn by hand. Most early attempts tried to replicate this hand sewing method and were generally a failure. Some looked to embroidery, where the needle was used to produce decorative, not joining stitches. This needle was altered to create a fine steel hook, called an aguja in Spain. This was called a crochet in France and could be used to create a form of chain stitch. This was possible because when the needle was pushed partly through fabric and withdrawn, it left a loop of thread. The following stitch would pass through this first loop whilst creating a loop of its own for the next stitch, this resembled a chain, hence the name. The first known attempt at a mechanical device for sewing was by the German born Charles Fredrick Wiesenthal, who was working in England. He was awarded British Patent No. 701 in 1755 for a double pointed needle with an eye at one end. This needle was designed to pass through the cloth by a pair of mechanical fingers and grasped on the other side by a second pair. This method of recreating the hand sewing method suffered from the problem of the needle going right through the fabric, meaning the full length of the thread had to do so as well. The mechanical limitations meant that the thread had to be kept short, needing frequent stops to renew the supply. In 1790 British Patent No. 1764 was awarded to Thomas Saint, a cabinetmaker of London. Due to several other patents dealing with leather and products to treat leather, the patent was filed under "Glues & Varnishes" and was not discovered until 1873 by Mr. Newton Wilson. Wilson built a replica to the patent's specifications and it had to be heavily modified before the machine would stitch, suggesting that Saint never actually made a machine of his own. Saint's design had the overhead arm for the needle and a form of tensioning system, which was to become a common feature of later machines. There were various attempts and patents awarded for chain stitch machines of varying types from 1795 – 1830, none of which were used to any degree of success, many of which didn't work correctly at all. A French tailor Barthelemy Thimonnier made the next major breakthrough. He did not try to replicate the human hand stitch, looking instead for a way of finding a stitch, which could be made quickly and easily by machine. His machine worked by using a horizontal arm mounted on a vertical reciprocating bar, the needle-bar projected from the end of the horizontal arm. The cloth was supported on a hollow, horizontal fixed arm, with a hole on the topside, which the needle projected through at the lowest part of its stroke. Inside the arm was a hook, which partly rotated at each stroke in order to wrap the thread (fed from the bobbin onto the hook) around the needle at each stroke. The needle then carried the thread back through the cloth with the upward motion of its stroke. This formed the chain stitch, which held the cloth together. The machine was powered by means of a foot pedal. The easiest way to describe this is to picture the machine working the wrong way round — the stitch was formed on the top of the cloth, not the bottom as with most other chain stitch machine made since. Thimonnier was awarded a French patent in 1830 and 80 of these machines were installed in a factory in Paris to stitch Soldiers clothing. Unfortunately, other tailors concerned for their livelihood invaded the factory and smashed the machines. The chain stitch has one major drawback: It is very weak, and the stitch can easily be pulled apart. A stitch more suited to machine production was needed and it was found in the lock stitch. A lock stitch is created by two separate threads interlocking through the two layers of fabric, resulting in a stitch, which looks the same from both sides of the fabric. Although the credit for the lock stitch machine is generally given to Elias Howe, Walter Hunt first developed it over ten years before in 1834. His machine used an eye-pointed needle (with the eye and the point on the same end) carrying the upper thread, and a shuttle carrying the lower thread. The curved needle moved through the fabric horizontally, leaving the loop as it withdrew. The shuttle passed through the loop, interlocking the thread. The feed let the machine down, requiring the machine to be stopped frequently to set up again. Hunt grew bored with his machine and sold it without bothering to patent it. Elias Howe patented his machine in 1846, using a similar method to Hunt's, except the fabric was held vertically. The major improvement he made was to put a groove in the needle running away from the point, starting from the eye. After a lengthy stint in England trying to attract interest for his machine he returned to America to find various people infringing his patent. He eventually won his case in 1854 and was awarded the right to claim royalties from the manufacturers using ideas covered in his patent. Treadle-powered Singer sewing machineIsaac Merritt Singer has become synonymous with the sewing machine. Trained as an engineer, he saw a rotary sewing machine being repaired in a Boston shop. He thought it to be clumsy and promptly set out to design a better one. His machine used a flying shuttle instead of a rotary one; the needle was mounted vertically and included a presser foot to hold the cloth in place. It had a fixed arm to hold the needle and included a basic tensioning system. This machine combined elements of Thimonnier's, Hunt's and Howe's machines. He was granted an American Patent in 1851 and it was suggested he patent the foot pedal (or treadle) used to power some of his machines, however it had been in use for too long for a patent to be issued. When Howe learned of Singer's machine he took him to court. Howe won and Singer was forced to pay a lump sum for all machines already produced. Singer then took out a license under Howe's patent and paid him $15 per machine. Singer then entered a joint partnership with a lawyer named Edward Clark, and they formed the first hire purchase scheme to allow people to afford their machines. Meanwhile Mr. Allen Wilson had developed a reciprocating shuttle, which was an improvement over Singer's and Howe's. However, John Bradshaw had patented a similar device and was threatening to sue. Wilson decided to change tack and try a new method. He went into partnership with Nathaniel Wheeler to produce a machine with a rotary hook instead of a shuttle. This was far quieter and smoother than the other methods and the Wheeler and Wilson Company produced more machines in 1850s and 1860s than any other manufacturer. Wilson also invented the four-motion feed mechanism; this is still seen on every machine today. This had a forward, down, back, and up motion, which drew the cloth through in an even and smooth motion. Through the 1850s more and more companies were being formed and were trying to sue each other. In 1856 the Sewing Machine Combination was formed, consisting of Singer, Howe, Wheeler and Wilson, and Grover and Baker. These four companies pooled their patents, meaning that all the other manufacturers had to obtain a license and pay $15 per machine. This lasted until 1877 when the last patent expired. James Edward Allen Gibbs (1829 – 1902), a farmer from Raphine in Rockbridge County, Virginia patented the first chain-stitch single-thread sewing machine on June 2, 1857. In partnership with James Wilcox, Gibbs became a principal in Wilcox & Gibbs Sewing Machine Company. Wilcox & Gibbs commercial sewing machines are still made and used in the 21st century. Sewing machines continued being made to roughly the same design, with more lavish decoration appearing until well into the 1900s when the first electric machines started to appear. At first these were standard machines with a motor strapped on the side. As more homes gained power, these became more popular and the motor was gradually introduced into the casing. Modern machines are computer-controlled and use stepper motors or sequential cams to achieve very complex patterns. Most of these are now made in Asia and the market is becoming more specialized, as fewer families own a sewing machine. Miscellaneous informationShoes, gloves, hats, books, upholstery, hosiery, tents, awnings, flags, and sails are sewn on specially devised machines. Machines have been designed with a very deep reach for sewing at the bottom of a boot shaft. Others have a very long reach — a yard (metre) or more — for sewing wide fabrics, such as tents or sails. Some heavy-duty industrial sewing machines use air cooling to keep the needle from overheating and burning through the thread, especially when sewing multiple layers of canvas or leather. Determining thread tension Place one edge of the fabric in each hand with some slack in the fabric. Pull the fabric taut. It will make a sound. Listen to the pitch of that sound. Now repeat in the other direction. You will notice a difference in the pitch of the sound. The higher pitch is the lengthwise grain, the lower pitch is the crosswise grain. To determine whether the upper tension is too tight or too loose for the fabric in use, try the following test. Take a small scrap of the fabric, fold it, and stitch a line ON THE BIAS of the fabric, using different colors of thread in the bobbin and on top. Grasp the bias line of stitching between the thumb and the index finger. Space the hands about 3 inches apart and pull with an even, quick force until one thread breaks. If the broken thread is the color of the thread in the needle, it means that the upper tension is too tight. If the broken thread is the color of the bobbin thread, the upper tension is too loose. If both threads break together and take more force to break, it means that the tensions are balanced. Threading the sewing machine To thread the sewing machine first you need to get out the thread. Put the thread in the head and put the spool cap on top of the thread. Put the thread through the faceplate and guide it down by the needle. Take the thread and carefully put it into the hole in the needle. Then you put it under the presser foot and back around. Then you take the bobbin out of the extension table, open up the needle plate, and place the bobbin in it and put the needle plate back on. Then you take the bobbin thread and put it under the presser foot by the thread. Slide the scissors under the presser foot and you are ready to sew. Some other things you need to do to sew are cut out the fabric. Cut on the lines. You also need to cut out the pocket. Put a pin in each of the four corners and cut out a square. Remove the pins and put more pins in the top and bottom. Fold the top and put pins in them. Related terminology Bobbin: The most probable cause of the lower thread breaking is an improperly wound bobbin. Regardless of where you wind the bobbin, inside the machine, on the top of the handwheel or on the front side near the hand wheel, the basic bobbin rules apply. Bobbin case: Unit holding bobbin in a sewing machine. Needle: The only problem can be that the needle was put in backwards. If your machine will not pick up the bottom thread or skips stitches badly, in most cases it's because the needle is in wrong. Presser foot: There are three main types for presser feet to fit most sewing machines — screw-on or snap-on low shank. Needle plate: The needle plate must be in perfect condition to stop the thread catching in the needle hole. Feed system: Some times for different operations you need to have different feeding systems or the same feeding systems with different kinds of parts that are involved in the feeding system. There are three different feeding systems for footwear sewing machine. Seam gauge: A useful ruler with a sliding marker. Helps measure seams, button hole openings. Sewing gauge: A useful ruler used to measure the size of a stitch, or the distance between a sewing machine needle and the needle plate. Handwheel: controls movement of presser foot. Pinking shears: Used to cut fabric, leaving a zig-zag edge that resists unraveling. Thread: Fine cord of natural or synthetic material with two or more elements twisted together and used for stitching. Pin: a device used for fastening objects or material together. It is usually made of steel, and is formed by drawing out a thin wire, sharpening the tip, and adding a head. Pincushion: small firm cushion, which holds pins. This page about sewing machines includes information from a Wikipedia article. Additional articles about sewing machines News stories about sewing machines External links for sewing machines Videos for sewing machines Wikis about sewing machines Discussion Groups about sewing machines Blogs about sewing machines Images of sewing machines |
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Pincushion: small firm cushion, which holds pins. SP may stand for:. It is usually made of steel, and is formed by drawing out a thin wire, sharpening the tip, and adding a head. Singapore Polytechnic. Pin: a device used for fastening objects or material together. Starting Prices (UK) a betting term. Thread: Fine cord of natural or synthetic material with two or more elements twisted together and used for stitching. Short Play (VCR format). Pinking shears: Used to cut fabric, leaving a zig-zag edge that resists unraveling. Short Play, a vinyl record (or single) format. Handwheel: controls movement of presser foot. Centre Party (Senterpartiet). Sewing gauge: A useful ruler used to measure the size of a stitch, or the distance between a sewing machine needle and the needle plate. Schleswigsche Partei. Helps measure seams, button hole openings. Saskatchewan Party. Seam gauge: A useful ruler with a sliding marker. Samata Party (India). There are three different feeding systems for footwear sewing machine. Samajwadi Party (India). Feed system: Some times for different operations you need to have different feeding systems or the same feeding systems with different kinds of parts that are involved in the feeding system. Socialist Party or Social Democratic Party. Needle plate: The needle plate must be in perfect condition to stop the thread catching in the needle hole. Political parties:
Presser foot: There are three main types for presser feet to fit most sewing machines — screw-on or snap-on low shank. Game Boy Advance SP. If your machine will not pick up the bottom thread or skips stitches badly, in most cases it's because the needle is in wrong. Suppressive Person - in the Church of Scientology, formally a condemned and shunned heretic or wrongdoer, loosely used to describe a source of trouble. Needle: The only problem can be that the needle was put in backwards. symplectic group or the corresponding Lie algebra (mathematics). Bobbin case: Unit holding bobbin in a sewing machine. "Status Post" in medical charting to indicate recent completion of a treatment. Regardless of where you wind the bobbin, inside the machine, on the top of the handwheel or on the front side near the hand wheel, the basic bobbin rules apply. state police (US). Bobbin: The most probable cause of the lower thread breaking is an improperly wound bobbin. state park (US). Related terminology. starting price bookmaking (known colloquially as SP). Fold the top and put pins in them. standard play. Remove the pins and put more pins in the top and bottom. stack pointer (computers). Put a pin in each of the four corners and cut out a square. surface-protrusion. You also need to cut out the pocket. South Pole. Cut on the lines. Southern Pacific Railroad (AAR reporting mark SP). Some other things you need to do to sew are cut out the fabric. South Park. Slide the scissors under the presser foot and you are ready to sew. SP is written in white on a black cloth on the sleeve. Then you take the bobbin thread and put it under the presser foot by the thread. Sotilaspoliisi, the military police of the Finnish Defence Forces. Then you take the bobbin out of the extension table, open up the needle plate, and place the bobbin in it and put the needle plate back on. SP is a USCS symbol for poorly graded sand. Then you put it under the presser foot and back around. Something Positive (A popular webcomic). Take the thread and carefully put it into the hole in the needle. Smashing Pumpkins (An American alternative rock band). Put the thread through the faceplate and guide it down by the needle. Sleep Paralysis. Put the thread in the head and put the spool cap on top of the thread. Single-player Term for a single-player video game, or variation of the same. To thread the sewing machine first you need to get out the thread. Silver piece (role-playing games). Threading the sewing machine. signal processor. If both threads break together and take more force to break, it means that the tensions are balanced. Sidney Pacific, a graduate student dormitory at MIT. If the broken thread is the color of the bobbin thread, the upper tension is too loose. short perforation (philately). If the broken thread is the color of the thread in the needle, it means that the upper tension is too tight. Shore Patrol (US Navy). Space the hands about 3 inches apart and pull with an even, quick force until one thread breaks. Severna Park, Maryland. Grasp the bias line of stitching between the thumb and the index finger. service pack. Take a small scrap of the fabric, fold it, and stitch a line ON THE BIAS of the fabric, using different colors of thread in the bobbin and on top. Self-propelled_artillery. To determine whether the upper tension is too tight or too loose for the fabric in use, try the following test. secondary power. The higher pitch is the lengthwise grain, the lower pitch is the crosswise grain. Scalable POWERparallel, IBM's SP and SP2. You will notice a difference in the pitch of the sound. SaskPower (Canada). Now repeat in the other direction. Sapeur-pompier (French firefighter). Listen to the pitch of that sound. São Paulo (state). It will make a sound. São Paulo (city). Pull the fabric taut. Sans Pression (Québec Hip Hop group, one member is also known as SP). Place one edge of the fabric in each hand with some slack in the fabric. Determining thread tension. Some heavy-duty industrial sewing machines use air cooling to keep the needle from overheating and burning through the thread, especially when sewing multiple layers of canvas or leather. Others have a very long reach — a yard (metre) or more — for sewing wide fabrics, such as tents or sails. Machines have been designed with a very deep reach for sewing at the bottom of a boot shaft. Shoes, gloves, hats, books, upholstery, hosiery, tents, awnings, flags, and sails are sewn on specially devised machines. Most of these are now made in Asia and the market is becoming more specialized, as fewer families own a sewing machine. Modern machines are computer-controlled and use stepper motors or sequential cams to achieve very complex patterns. As more homes gained power, these became more popular and the motor was gradually introduced into the casing. At first these were standard machines with a motor strapped on the side. Sewing machines continued being made to roughly the same design, with more lavish decoration appearing until well into the 1900s when the first electric machines started to appear. Wilcox & Gibbs commercial sewing machines are still made and used in the 21st century. In partnership with James Wilcox, Gibbs became a principal in Wilcox & Gibbs Sewing Machine Company. James Edward Allen Gibbs (1829 – 1902), a farmer from Raphine in Rockbridge County, Virginia patented the first chain-stitch single-thread sewing machine on June 2, 1857. This lasted until 1877 when the last patent expired. These four companies pooled their patents, meaning that all the other manufacturers had to obtain a license and pay $15 per machine. In 1856 the Sewing Machine Combination was formed, consisting of Singer, Howe, Wheeler and Wilson, and Grover and Baker. Through the 1850s more and more companies were being formed and were trying to sue each other. This had a forward, down, back, and up motion, which drew the cloth through in an even and smooth motion. Wilson also invented the four-motion feed mechanism; this is still seen on every machine today. This was far quieter and smoother than the other methods and the Wheeler and Wilson Company produced more machines in 1850s and 1860s than any other manufacturer. He went into partnership with Nathaniel Wheeler to produce a machine with a rotary hook instead of a shuttle. Wilson decided to change tack and try a new method. However, John Bradshaw had patented a similar device and was threatening to sue. Allen Wilson had developed a reciprocating shuttle, which was an improvement over Singer's and Howe's. Meanwhile Mr. Singer then entered a joint partnership with a lawyer named Edward Clark, and they formed the first hire purchase scheme to allow people to afford their machines. Singer then took out a license under Howe's patent and paid him $15 per machine. Howe won and Singer was forced to pay a lump sum for all machines already produced. When Howe learned of Singer's machine he took him to court. He was granted an American Patent in 1851 and it was suggested he patent the foot pedal (or treadle) used to power some of his machines, however it had been in use for too long for a patent to be issued. This machine combined elements of Thimonnier's, Hunt's and Howe's machines. It had a fixed arm to hold the needle and included a basic tensioning system. His machine used a flying shuttle instead of a rotary one; the needle was mounted vertically and included a presser foot to hold the cloth in place. He thought it to be clumsy and promptly set out to design a better one. Trained as an engineer, he saw a rotary sewing machine being repaired in a Boston shop. Isaac Merritt Singer has become synonymous with the sewing machine. He eventually won his case in 1854 and was awarded the right to claim royalties from the manufacturers using ideas covered in his patent. After a lengthy stint in England trying to attract interest for his machine he returned to America to find various people infringing his patent. The major improvement he made was to put a groove in the needle running away from the point, starting from the eye. Elias Howe patented his machine in 1846, using a similar method to Hunt's, except the fabric was held vertically. Hunt grew bored with his machine and sold it without bothering to patent it. The feed let the machine down, requiring the machine to be stopped frequently to set up again. The shuttle passed through the loop, interlocking the thread. The curved needle moved through the fabric horizontally, leaving the loop as it withdrew. His machine used an eye-pointed needle (with the eye and the point on the same end) carrying the upper thread, and a shuttle carrying the lower thread. Although the credit for the lock stitch machine is generally given to Elias Howe, Walter Hunt first developed it over ten years before in 1834. A lock stitch is created by two separate threads interlocking through the two layers of fabric, resulting in a stitch, which looks the same from both sides of the fabric. A stitch more suited to machine production was needed and it was found in the lock stitch. The chain stitch has one major drawback: It is very weak, and the stitch can easily be pulled apart. Unfortunately, other tailors concerned for their livelihood invaded the factory and smashed the machines. Thimonnier was awarded a French patent in 1830 and 80 of these machines were installed in a factory in Paris to stitch Soldiers clothing. The easiest way to describe this is to picture the machine working the wrong way round — the stitch was formed on the top of the cloth, not the bottom as with most other chain stitch machine made since. The machine was powered by means of a foot pedal. This formed the chain stitch, which held the cloth together. The needle then carried the thread back through the cloth with the upward motion of its stroke. Inside the arm was a hook, which partly rotated at each stroke in order to wrap the thread (fed from the bobbin onto the hook) around the needle at each stroke. The cloth was supported on a hollow, horizontal fixed arm, with a hole on the topside, which the needle projected through at the lowest part of its stroke. His machine worked by using a horizontal arm mounted on a vertical reciprocating bar, the needle-bar projected from the end of the horizontal arm. He did not try to replicate the human hand stitch, looking instead for a way of finding a stitch, which could be made quickly and easily by machine. A French tailor Barthelemy Thimonnier made the next major breakthrough. There were various attempts and patents awarded for chain stitch machines of varying types from 1795 – 1830, none of which were used to any degree of success, many of which didn't work correctly at all. Saint's design had the overhead arm for the needle and a form of tensioning system, which was to become a common feature of later machines. Wilson built a replica to the patent's specifications and it had to be heavily modified before the machine would stitch, suggesting that Saint never actually made a machine of his own. Newton Wilson. Due to several other patents dealing with leather and products to treat leather, the patent was filed under "Glues & Varnishes" and was not discovered until 1873 by Mr. 1764 was awarded to Thomas Saint, a cabinetmaker of London. In 1790 British Patent No. The mechanical limitations meant that the thread had to be kept short, needing frequent stops to renew the supply. This method of recreating the hand sewing method suffered from the problem of the needle going right through the fabric, meaning the full length of the thread had to do so as well. This needle was designed to pass through the cloth by a pair of mechanical fingers and grasped on the other side by a second pair. 701 in 1755 for a double pointed needle with an eye at one end. He was awarded British Patent No. The first known attempt at a mechanical device for sewing was by the German born Charles Fredrick Wiesenthal, who was working in England. The following stitch would pass through this first loop whilst creating a loop of its own for the next stitch, this resembled a chain, hence the name. This was possible because when the needle was pushed partly through fabric and withdrawn, it left a loop of thread. This was called a crochet in France and could be used to create a form of chain stitch. This needle was altered to create a fine steel hook, called an aguja in Spain. Some looked to embroidery, where the needle was used to produce decorative, not joining stitches. Most early attempts tried to replicate this hand sewing method and were generally a failure. Before the invention of a usable machine for sewing or dress design, everything was sewn by hand. . Some have a work feeder that can move along a curved path, while others have a work feeder with a work clamp. Some have a work holder frame. Some machines can create embroidery-type stitches. The fabric shifting mechanism may be a simple work guide or may be pattern-controlled, e.g., Jacquard-type. Some older machine types are chain stitch machines and sergers. Most home sewing machines and many industrial machines use a two-thread stitch called the lockstitch. They include means for gripping, supporting, and conveying the fabric past the sewing needle to form the stitch pattern. Sewing machines can make a great variety of plain or patterned stitches. Sewing machines make a stitch, called a sewing-machine stitch, usually using two threads, although machines exist that stitch using one, three, four or more threads. A sewing machine is a mechanical (or electromechanical) device that joins fabrics with thread. |