Thimble alternatives.
#21
Member
Join Date: Apr 2013
Location: Longmont, CO
Posts: 4
I have been making my own leather thimbles and love them. They are great and easy to make plus inexpensive. You can easily adjust the size for your finger. Look for directions and pattern below. I do not use the little circle of plastic in the tip and they still work great.
http://www.taunton.com/threads/pages/t00077.asp
http://www.taunton.com/threads/pages/t00077.asp
#22
I have not tryed yet it but a quilting freind of my mom's and was talking about her thimbles. she told me her make her own out of that first-aid tape that stick to it self. I found a roll the other day and plan to try to make one. Her said she fold a pad of the tape for the end of her finger and warps it with more of the tape until it fall right on her finger.
#23
Super Member
Join Date: May 2011
Location: Pacific NW
Posts: 9,559
I have been making my own leather thimbles and love them. They are great and easy to make plus inexpensive. You can easily adjust the size for your finger. Look for directions and pattern below. I do not use the little circle of plastic in the tip and they still work great.
http://www.taunton.com/threads/pages/t00077.asp
http://www.taunton.com/threads/pages/t00077.asp
I tried the black leather thimbles, but I push the needle with the side of my finger, not the tip, and the needle head would go right through the seam. I like the Dritz leather thimbles, the seam is on the top of the finger instead of the side, but I love the idea of making my own thimbles!
#25
Super Member
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Here and there
Posts: 1,669
Thimbles are an acquired taste I think. I started sewing with a thimble as a child because my mother and grandmother always used one. I now have their silver thimbles along with a sliver thimble my husband bought me over 40 years ago. Each time I wear one of those thimbles it gives me such comfort and warm fuzzies. I wear mine in my middle finger. You need to have one that is the right size so you don't have to struggle to keep it on. To get used to it I suggest wearing it when you aren't sewing so it becomes a natural feeling on the end of your finger. The more you wear it the more comfortable it should begin to feel. I feel naked trying to sew without a thimble. If you have long fingernails you might try one with an open end on it for your finger nail to go through.
#27
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: NW Kansas
Posts: 601
Thimbles are an acquired taste I think. I started sewing with a thimble as a child because my mother and grandmother always used one. I now have their silver thimbles along with a sliver thimble my husband bought me over 40 years ago. Each time I wear one of those thimbles it gives me such comfort and warm fuzzies. I wear mine in my middle finger. You need to have one that is the right size so you don't have to struggle to keep it on. To get used to it I suggest wearing it when you aren't sewing so it becomes a natural feeling on the end of your finger. The more you wear it the more comfortable it should begin to feel. I feel naked trying to sew without a thimble. If you have long fingernails you might try one with an open end on it for your finger nail to go through.
#28
I always use a leather thimble. And when push comes to shove, (to coin a phrase) my favorite tool comes into play, that being the needle nose pliers to pull the needle through.
Bess, my avatar and super dog ate my leather thimble. Thank heaven I was through tying a quilt, nevertheless, I have to get a new one.
So when I go on vacation in a couple of weeks, I will bring home a souvenir from a quilt shop - a leather thimble, this time remembering to put it in a prescription container/bottle (those brown plastic things). Gotta keep all that stuff away from the canine vacuum cleaner.
Have a great day - I am having a deck put out in front of the porch and I have two rocking chairs I am putting out there and I am going to enjoy what's left of Spring and the summer doing a bunch of embroidery and hand sewing rockin' away and listening to a good book (right now it is "Mrs. Lincoln's Rival" by Jennifer Chiaverini. Very good book. Edie
Bess, my avatar and super dog ate my leather thimble. Thank heaven I was through tying a quilt, nevertheless, I have to get a new one.
So when I go on vacation in a couple of weeks, I will bring home a souvenir from a quilt shop - a leather thimble, this time remembering to put it in a prescription container/bottle (those brown plastic things). Gotta keep all that stuff away from the canine vacuum cleaner.
Have a great day - I am having a deck put out in front of the porch and I have two rocking chairs I am putting out there and I am going to enjoy what's left of Spring and the summer doing a bunch of embroidery and hand sewing rockin' away and listening to a good book (right now it is "Mrs. Lincoln's Rival" by Jennifer Chiaverini. Very good book. Edie
#29
Japanese thimbles are shaped like rings. This means that you can hold a needle easily and push with the side of the thimble-ring. Clover sell them. They come in metal and also hard plastic, covered with a leather tie which accommodates differently sized fingers easily. As well, there is a shashiko needle as well. It goes on as a ring and there is a small, round, metal plate that sits in the palm of the hand. I have never had success with a conventional thimble which mostly falls off. I've been very happy with the Japanese ones.
Last edited by jitkaau; 04-10-2014 at 03:17 AM. Reason: correct typo.
#30
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2011
Posts: 729
I use the finger of a rubber glove with a piece of a Tupperware shaped like the end of my finger inside I use my index finger and thumb so the glove finger helps to grip the needle to pull thru the layers of fabric works for me
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