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First of all, you never sew over pins on any sewing machine because the needle might hit the pin and bend or break. Secondly, you never sew over pins on a serger because the pins might get caught on the trim blade and cause a malfunction or damage to your machine. In both cases, before a pin gets to the needle, either slow down or stop for a second to remove each pin.
It was during the 1980's I am certain. I got my Master's degree in fashion design. The only sergers that were available at that time for the home-sew market was a homely little serger made by Babylock. People that had them liked them. None of my fellow grads students had one, but we were all interested. The first serger that I bought was a White 534 in 1987. (I still have the receipt and I still have the serger. It works great!) I remember that it had been out a little while before that. I can't remember how long. It was listed as the best serger on the market in consumer reports for something like 15-20 years. The 534 was the first easy to thread serger for the home market and was definitely that top serger of its time. Mine will not stop. It is amazing!
reference guide for super lock serger s.n 521640/1940 Singer has all the manuals for white machines and a few others. most are free instant PDF copies.
Hi! I sew stretch panne velvet all the time using my serger. It is the easiest way by far. If you don't have a serger, I would recommend using the tightest zig zag stitch on your standard sewing machine.
Serged stitching is the kind of stitching you find on the inside seams of ready-to-wear garments. This stitching is done on a machine called a "serger". A serger is threaded with 2, 3, or 4 threads at once. It sews, binds, and trims all at the same time.
A serger is a sewing machine that sews and cuts the fabric at the same time. This makes for a neater seam. It is used a lot in professional sewing. Check out the inside seam on most store bought clothes and you will see that there is no extra fabric on the seam.A serger machine is used to trim the edge of a fabric, and then enclose the seam allowance or edge of the fabric inside a thread casing, all in one step. This "finishes" the edge, preventing a woven fabric from fraying. There are various options that each brand of serger offers, including, but not limited to:rolled hemgathering for ruffleschain stitchcover stitch
its 1/16th of an inch if your doing color shading, and 1/32nds of an inch for outlining and 3/32nds i believe for black shading. see with the color ink you have to have your needle sticking out farther than you would for outlining or black shading. On an outline you bareley want your needle to stick out this way it wont be all over the place when you hit the pedal, it'll be pretty set in your tip so there wont be any unnessary moving around.
A Bernina Serger is used for serging; making sewing simple. It allows you to cut, sew and neaten in a single operaton. Ideal for all types of material, silk, satin, linen, fleece and denims; serging will become straightforward for even the most inexperienced user.
Yes it does. All sergers, due to differential feed, can handle heavy fabrics.
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The HPV needle is typically a 3/8 or 1/2 inch needle. It is the standard size used for all vaccines in that age group.