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kmorgavi


quality posts: 0 Private Messages kmorgavi
endangereddelicacies wrote:As a single male, I must ask, what is this? The newest model roomba?



Its the machine that does the fancy edge work on your jeans and the double stitchin up the legs. It puts in seams and hems with multiple threads at once.

ladypuma8


quality posts: 5 Private Messages ladypuma8
KtCallista wrote:Does anyone know if the sewing machine can handle basic stitches on heavy fabrics like canvas and denim?



Yes it can, you will need to play with the settings, but you can pretty much sew on anything

takitron


quality posts: 0 Private Messages takitron
plavacek wrote:What is a serger? And, does me not knowing that mean I have no reason to buy it?



It makes seams! http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overlock
http://sewing.about.com/od/sergersoverlock/ss/serger.htm

Its very handy to have, especially if you are garbing a bunch of lARPers and you don't want their edges to fray and look all ghetto.

inazuma


quality posts: 2 Private Messages inazuma

Anyone know if this will work well for scrapbooking purposes? My wife has been looking for a sewing machine for some of her scrapbooking and I was thinking of getting this since it is a set and she can possibly use it to sew other things?

Thanks!

kmorgavi


quality posts: 0 Private Messages kmorgavi
plavacek wrote:What is a serger? And, does me not knowing that mean I have no reason to buy it?



A serger is a machine that does multiple stitching at once. The seam up you pant legs, the double stitching in your jeans and many other types of stitching you never thought much about because you bought your clothes. That's how they do those fast.

sdc100


quality posts: 415 Private Messages sdc100
bnbsouthworth wrote:Somehow I don't think anyone is going to be complaining about the $5 shipping today...



Yeah, but those of us in NY, TX and WA are complaining about the sales tax...

If case anyone from those states are buing this, make sure you use coupon TAXSUCKS.

Atashi06


quality posts: 0 Private Messages Atashi06

If anyone only wants the sewing machine part of the Woot, I'd be interested in buying the serger off of you.

KtCallista


quality posts: 31 Private Messages KtCallista
ladypuma8 wrote:Yes it can, you will need to play with the settings, but you can pretty much sew on anything



Thanks, I know a lot of new machines don't have enough engine to get through those fabrics. I ruined a friend's machine making canvas water bottle holders once.

___________________________________________________________________
Paper Napkins on the Edge of Insanity

Thanks so much Secret Santa!!

BethInAK


quality posts: 2 Private Messages BethInAK
devexityspace wrote:Singer is the only brand of sewing machines anyone should ever even consider. It's the "Apple" of sewing machines in a sense.

This is an amazing price at $350.



my husqvarna's feelings are hurt.

It is an amazing price though. I'm wondering if I need two more sewing machines.

ThunderThighs


quality posts: 325 Private Messages ThunderThighs

Staff

sdc100 wrote:The weird thing is that neither model exists on Singer's website. I wonder what that means... ? The Search function is weird in that you're not allowed to put letters in.

It's there as the combo


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saltysteele


quality posts: 4 Private Messages saltysteele

my wife and mother in law are sewers. they both have sergers.

you can't do everything on a serger, but like has been stated, it trims the edge of the 2 fabrics the same, then wraps them both in a thread casing, essentially. it not only gives a stronger seam, but it's also much quicker than a normal sewing machine.

however, you can't sew a pocket or patch onto a piece of fabric, as an example of how it is different from a normal sewing machine. it always cuts the edges flush, then sews on top bottom and wraps around the edge.

clintone


quality posts: 10 Private Messages clintone
marble80 wrote:The only thing to be aware of when buying a singer is that all the internal parts are plastic so they can break easier than other brand machines



I had heard that many machines now use plastic gears, which is what prompted my earlier post, asking about the durability. I'm on the fence-jump on this deal or suck it up and pay the premium for something like a Pfaff. Regardless, I'm really tempted.

sugarpike


quality posts: 8 Private Messages sugarpike
clintone wrote:Any opinions on the overall quality and durability of the sewing machine? My wife's been itching for one, so I've been doing my research and it seems many of today's machines lack the durability I remember from my days in junior high, making my bookbag and potholder. Also, being a bit of a luddite, something about a computerized sewing machine just leads me to wonder if this isn't a feature that's destined to malfunction.



29 years ago my husband bought me a computerized Viking sewing machine. It finally died...but it wasn't any of the computerized parts that quit! The backstitch stopped backstitching and a couple of other parts just wore out, but the computerized part was still going strong. Having said that, Viking has always been a top quality brand and we paid a LOT for that machine....still, for this price I'd have to say it's worth taking a closer look at. In for one!

catheyweigel


quality posts: 1 Private Messages catheyweigel
plavacek wrote:What is a serger? And, does me not knowing that mean I have no reason to buy it?



A serger hems with that wonderful stitch that loops around and looks like you really aren't short, these pants were made that way just for you.

rtermini


quality posts: 0 Private Messages rtermini
devexityspace wrote:Singer is the only brand of sewing machines anyone should ever even consider. It's the "Apple" of sewing machines in a sense.

This is an amazing price at $350.



If you think that, you don't know squat about sewing machines.

Price is good but come on the"Apple" of machines. You ever used a Juki or a Bernina.

arroyoko


quality posts: 2 Private Messages arroyoko


Looks like there's a glut of sewing machines and sergers in the US as almost all sewing and serging have been outsourced to China...

sdc100


quality posts: 415 Private Messages sdc100
bubbawheat wrote:It may be a good price but FWIW My Mom says Singer hasn't been a great brand for decades. She says her Bernina & Vikings are top grade - I suspect that's more Apple like - expensive but high wow & high quality.



Yeah, like so many once-proud American companies (i.e. Sylvania, RCA, Bell & Howell), they've begun mindlessly stamping their name on generic Chinese-made products. They're mostly sold in Asia but I've seen Singer TV's, DVD players and remote controls in NYC discount stores. I used to think that it may be another Singer, but if you look at the below TV box, you'll see the same S logo as the one on their Sewing Machine website.

Cobaltqube


quality posts: 0 Private Messages Cobaltqube

So, Seeing as how this is advertised as a LCD Sewing Machine..

Does that mean that I can buy this and a few thousand LCD Digital Watches and sew myself a huge LCD TV ??

If so (sew) I'm in for three !!!!!!

CobaltQube
I'll have bacon or cheese and a bowl of cereal please..
Making Life Better.. One Woot @ a time
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speedoo


quality posts: 41 Private Messages speedoo
KtCallista wrote:Does anyone know if the sewing machine can handle basic stitches on heavy fabrics like canvas and denim?



Probably not. If you want to do a lot of heavy duty sewing, you are better off with maybe an older, tougher machine like the Pfaff 130.

sdc100


quality posts: 415 Private Messages sdc100
endangereddelicacies wrote:As a single male, I must ask, what is this? The newest model roomba?



Tim Gunn and most of the guys on Project Runway are also single males, yet they can instantly tell you what a serger does. So being a single male is no excuse for fashion ignorance!

xenotionar


quality posts: 0 Private Messages xenotionar
BethInAK wrote:my husqvarna's feelings are hurt.

It is an amazing price though. I'm wondering if I need two more sewing machines.



Don't worry. Singer bought out Husqvarna years ago.

mattlscc


quality posts: 34 Private Messages mattlscc

I did not realize how many woot fans like to sew. Pretty cool. BTW - a co-workers mom invented this pretty awesome needle if any of you are interested... check it out http://www.spiraleyeneedles.com/

aliensquirl


quality posts: 1 Private Messages aliensquirl
KtCallista wrote:Does anyone know if the sewing machine can handle basic stitches on heavy fabrics like canvas and denim?



Sew from the lightest weight tricots to the heaviest denim, without making presser foot
pressure adjustments.

KtCallista


quality posts: 31 Private Messages KtCallista
speedoo wrote:Probably not. If you want to do a lot of heavy duty sewing, you are better off with maybe an older, tougher machine like the Pfaff 130.



Hmm, I don't know if I'll be doing "a lot", but I don't like my creativity to be limited by my machine's lack of guts. Like I said earlier about ruining a machine while making canvas water bottle holders. I don't sew a lot, but sometimes I go to with a vengeance.

aliensquirl wrote:Sew from the lightest weight tricots to the heaviest denim, without making presser foot
pressure adjustments.



Hmm. That sounds like marketing.... is it accurate?

2-1 it could sew denim and heavy fabrics, so far. . . . .

Thank you my fellow wooters for your help, any others are always appreciated!

___________________________________________________________________
Paper Napkins on the Edge of Insanity

Thanks so much Secret Santa!!

myoshimi


quality posts: 0 Private Messages myoshimi

All I can say is... Sew what!

LorenF


quality posts: 0 Private Messages LorenF

I guess the woot today lets you know that you really do reap what you sew.

ladypuma8


quality posts: 5 Private Messages ladypuma8
KtCallista wrote:Hmm. That sounds like marketing.... is it accurate?



Marketing in the fact that you shouldn't have to adjust the presser foot anyway, it is the tension you would have to fiddle with...

claudiajean


quality posts: 0 Private Messages claudiajean

Thank you, Woot! Finally! My sewing machine Woot that I have been asking for - for about three years! And it's a good one! I'm in!

So is my sister - but not for her - for my seven-year-old niece for Christmas. (That's the answer to question number one: is this a good machine/serger for novices and beginners? My niece has been sewing for two years and is ready for an upgrade from a very basic machine. Plus, after two years, she needs a serger.)

Let me just start with: I sew professionally, and I've beeen sewing, yes, using a machine, since I was five. That's nearly 40 years of sewing (and learning form sewing mistakes.)

This package is not a mistake - it's a mistake to pass it up.

There's been a lot said about Singers in the comments above, and both opinions of the brand are true - Singers held absolute dominance in quality from the founding of the company in 1860, until the mid-1960's A good 100-year run. They designed and marketed arguably the best home machine ever, the 500A Slant-O-Matic Rocketeer, released in 1960, and then suddenly in the mid 60's made the curious decision to change from all-metal to mucho plastic in their moving parts fabrication. At the time, little was known about the long term wear on plastic parts, and after a few years' use, some of the machines started falling apart. Thus Singer suffered a deserved rap on its reputation, and most Singers made from 1968 through the mid 1980s are junk.

Enter new management for Singer, and a new era of pride in what they produce, and today's Singers are again at the top of their game and have been for the last decade.

This Singer package is an extremely good deal on a high-quality product. Gentlemen (unless you are Tim Gunn), the value of this Singer package is equivalent to a Vizio 42" TV for $99.95. Or an iPad for the same 100 smackeroos.

The "little sister" to this exact machine, the "Stylist" was a Consumer Digest Best Buy, at $400, and with only 100 decorative and utility stitches. This upgraded model of the Stylist has 400 stitches, and comes with a decent serger, to boot.

Is it a machine for beginners? More importantly, it is a machine easy enough for beginners to use, although it will keep a more experienced sewing enthusiast or tailor (Seamstress is a synonym for prostitute in 16 languages, so kindly don't call me or your mother that...) happy for years. The decorative stitches are also fun for scrapbooking, and, yes, it will sew and embroider beautifully on paper.

About the only thing I wouldn't use this machine for is repeated use on denim, upholstery or marine vinyl. The occasional hobby slipcover or pair of jeans, yes. But over and over with the heavyweight fabric - no. But then, if you sew a lot of marine vinyl, it's likely you know you need a commercial heavy-duty power machine for that work.

(This is such a good deal that I'm even getting a set, and I have a 20x20 studio full of sergers and sewing machines already!)

On to the serger: If you are completely new to sergers, think of the serger as the microwave to your conventional oven. It's very possible to live without a microwave in your kitchen, but it's damn nice to have. And most home tailors would never want to relinquish their serger once they have had one.

A serger can sew strong finished seams especially stretch seams, can finish seams on tailored garments, this serger can flatlock (activewear seams), and do rolled hems (those tiny hems on scarves and napkins.) You can also make interesting decorative ribbons for the serious crafter or scrapbooker.

This is an excellent home serger, that will sew a 2, 3, or 3/4 thread seam, but not a 2/4 seam. The 2/4 configuration is one of the heavier duty configurations you see in ready to wear and is not available on this serger. This machine will sew and finish seams on stretch fabrics, and will finish seams on woven fabrics, although I would still recommend reinforcement with a straight stitch from the sewing machine on stress areas when using a 3/4 as a seaming stitch on wovens (as oppposed to a finishing stitch.)

This is a good serger for a beginner to an intermediate home sewing enthusiast. Again, it is not a professional weight, and not ideal to run in a 16-hour a day environment. But, if your shop is serging 16 hours a day, you know this.

All in all, this is an excellent gifting package for the home sewing fan in your life (and you will look like you spent $1000 at a dealer or $700 at HSN).

Don't be a Fool! Buy now and hide it away for Christmas/Hanukkah/Kwanzaa/Solstice/Yule!

And thank you, WOot!

dsscheibe


quality posts: 4 Private Messages dsscheibe
devexityspace wrote:Singer is the only brand of sewing machines anyone should ever even consider. It's the "Apple" of sewing machines in a sense.

This is an amazing price at $350.




Hardly, Singer is low to middle to low end. These are low end Singer machines at that and the price is probably close to retail, can't say for sure with out knowing the model numbers.

Singer hasn't been the orgional Singer company since about 1970. Off the top of my head singer has been owned by Merrit, Semitech and now part of SVP World wide which is held by a finace company out of the Bahammas.

Viking, Pfaff, Bernina, Janomie/New Home would be the top companies.

I should disclose I'm a sewing machine Technican for SVP.

skyz


quality posts: 0 Private Messages skyz

does it do embroiders like this one
http://www.amazon.com/Brother-SE400-Computerized-Embroidery-Machine/dp/B003AVMZA4/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1314774638&sr=8-1

as well??
buying for my gf but dont know anything about it...

dsscheibe


quality posts: 4 Private Messages dsscheibe
sdc100 wrote:the one on their Sewing Machine website.



That would be Semitech a Canadian appliance company who bought Singer so they could use the name on their products. They don't own it any more and I don't think have the right to use the name any more but could be wrong about that.

dsscheibe


quality posts: 4 Private Messages dsscheibe
cherrysweet wrote:Just one question - why does everything have to be made in China. I will stick with my old machine - American made. I plan to purchase only products made in America. Let's support our own work force.
Last thought - Singer has been a reliable brand!



There haven't been any sewing machines made in America for a long time. I'm not even sure any are made in Europe any more. Pretty much all of them are made in Asia some where, not all in China.

dsscheibe


quality posts: 4 Private Messages dsscheibe
kmorgavi wrote:Its the machine that does the fancy edge work on your jeans and the double stitchin up the legs. It puts in seams and hems with multiple threads at once.



It won't do the double stitching up the seams of your jeans, that is a special two needle comercial machine. Sergers are more appropiate for edging on things like knits and shirt fabrics. If you look at the inside seam of your t-shirt sleeve that is a serged seam. Different sergers do more types of stitches.

Would not recomend using a home serger on jeans or canvas or anything else that heavy.

srlagarto


quality posts: 11 Private Messages srlagarto
wootvan wrote:A serger trims the seam and encloses the seam allowance or edge of the fabric, inside a thread casing, all in one step.

So, to answer your question, a serger saves time.



In other words, a serger allows for overlock stitching. If you overlock your hemming, your sewing is faster, almost as if you have a 3 gigastitch machine instead of the 2.5 gigastitches it's rated at. It's really nice, but you have to make sure it's cooled properly.

My personal favorite serger is the serger model Nine (usually just called a serger Nine). It makes for accurate hemming. More importantly, it's fast. It can hem a pair of jeans in a matter of seconds. The old saying is definitely true: "A serger Nine saves time."

Okay. I think I'll stop with the puns now.

Finzz


quality posts: 0 Private Messages Finzz

Can anyome please tell me if this sewing machine will monogram dress shirts on the cuff? My wife is getting frustrated with paying $15.00 - $20.00 PER shirt. Thanks in advance for your help with this!

claudiajean


quality posts: 0 Private Messages claudiajean
skyz wrote:does it do embroiders like this one
http://www.amazon.com/Brother-SE400-Computerized-Embroidery-Machine/dp/B003AVMZA4/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1314774638&sr=8-1

as well??
buying for my gf but dont know anything about it...



It will do more of the decorative stitches than the Borther se400, but it is not an "embroidery" machineas that particular Brother is, meaning a machine that will accept digitized designs and embroider in a field.

If your primary use is embroidering motifs on clothing or accessories, rather than getting a multi-purpose sewing machine that will be good for a lot of regular sewing, you want an embroidery machine that is designed for doing just that. All of the major brands have them, but Brother leads the way on the affordable ones. Something to keep in mind: it doesn't just do the designs - you have to buy them on memory cards or as uploads from you computer.

arevak


quality posts: 0 Private Messages arevak
sdc100 wrote:The weird thing is that neither model exists on Singer's website. I wonder what that means... ? The Search function is weird in that you're not allowed to put letters in.



In less than 15 seconds I found this...
http://www.singerco.com/products/2162/perfect-finish-combo


Looks the same to me ....

dsscheibe


quality posts: 4 Private Messages dsscheibe

Ok found them on Singers site and HSN, Machine is higher end than I thought, but I'd expect the serger to sell for less than $200=250 by it's self.

Singer Perfect Finish


HSN Singer Perfect Finish $699

claudiajean


quality posts: 0 Private Messages claudiajean
Finzz wrote:Can anyome please tell me if this sewing machine will monogram dress shirts on the cuff? My wife is getting frustrated with paying $15.00 - $20.00 PER shirt. Thanks in advance for your help with this!



Yes, it has both a block and a script alphabet built in that are scalable, and very appropriate for monogramming.

nutmeg3


quality posts: 1 Private Messages nutmeg3
KtCallista wrote:Does anyone know if the sewing machine can handle basic stitches on heavy fabrics like canvas and denim?



This machine will sew clothing weight fabrics. Most machines come with a 14 size needle. You can replace with a heavier size (16).
Here is info about needles sizes. http://sewing.about.com/od/sewingmachineindex/ig/Sewing-Machine-Needles/Needle-Sizes.--94.htm