Since I do not know what kind of machine you have ( you can sometimes look for the manufacturers website, and see if they show a threading diagram ) all I can say is the rule of thumb is to draw the thread from the spool, usually, through a disc or eyelet, and draw the thread down a slot, ( it will catch a hook of some sort, inside that slot ) then back up, usually passing between 2 discs, ( which hold the tension ) over another hook ( this is an obvious slot in the thread take up ) and back down to the thread guide and to the needle.
You will always have the thread moving down, up then down again, for a total of 3 passes through the mechanism. MOST machines are threaded from left to right, though I had one machine that threaded from right to left.
Like I said, it might be a good idea to check the manufacturers website for threading instructions.
Pushes thread through fabric to make stitches.
The thread moves from the spool through the needle to make stitches on a sewing machine. The thread take-up lever is what feeds the thread from the spool to the needle as it moves up and down.
its a cotton gin
The thread guide keeps the thread running in the proper place. If the thread is not threaded correctly, the tension will be off, resulting in jammed or broken threads in the machine.On a sewing machine, the thread guide is a small part that is attached above the needle. It looks like a hook and it hold the thread in place as it is fed through the needle.
Thread is the name for the string used in sewing. It is usually very thin, so that it is easily put through the eye of a needle and pulled through fabric. It is sold in many colors, and in many different weights.
It was the Spinning Jenny that changed cotton into thread. The cotton gin removed the seeds.
Pass a thread through the eye of a needle unaided from the opposite side of the needle towards the human eye; while looking through the eye of the needle.
Needle and thread. Sewing machine.
to use a knitting machine for the girls only one you have to thread it on one needle and then not thread it on to the next then thread it on again then don't etc
The thread must come from the FRONT of the upright spool on the back of the machine. Thread through the small eyelet on the back (nearest the spool(s), projecting from the top), then through the thread guide at the front of the machine. If you are using a double needle (therefore two spools of thread), the thread from the left-hand spool should go through the top hole and the thread from the right-hand spool through the bottom hole. Come down to the tension disks. Bring the thread through the back disk, up again under the wire guide, and down under the thread guide that is just to the left of the tension disks. Bring the thread through the eye of the take-up lever (the piece that moves up and down when you sew) from RIGHT to LEFT. Guide the thread back down through the thread guide next to the tensioner. There is a little thread guide just inside the door on the left side of the machine; bring the thread through this guide. Then pull the thread through the wire guide above the needle (it's easiest to hold the thread horizontally to do this). Thread the needle front to back. HTH. YMMV.
Sewing machine needles come in several different types of packages and types of needles. Needles vary depending on the type of fabric you are sewing. The most common type for cotton thread on cotton fabric runs about $3.00 per package.
the purpose is to have a thread holder that connects the thread to the needle