![]() It’s remarkably similar to the one my mom inherited, which I learned to sew on. This machine came to me through my husband’s family. Which it did, but in a longer process than I could have anticipated … One of my hopes for the article about treadle sewing I wrote for Seamwork this summer was that it would give me the motivational push I needed to get this machine out of the garage. It’s actually much easier to rock the machine up on its hinges and lift it out by loosening screws underneath (as shown in the Seamwork article) before taking out the hardware. Backstory is at the beginning, practical details are in the middle, words from the heart and pictures of the finished object at the end. At last, my treadle sewing machine restoration project is done, and at even longer last (depending on how you look at it) I’m sharing it here! This is necessarily a big post.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |