Originally Posted by miriam
(Post 7025944)
Really, those are collectable??? How come nobody wants it?
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I've never seen one of those around here either. Blackside 128s yes, but not 99s....
CD in Oklahoma |
Maybe I should jump on it. She's asking $65. The belt is rotten and the electrical cord has been redone along the way. I don't know what else to look at. I didn't try to turn it on but the needle moves when I spun the freewheel, and the freewheel moves freely.
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Belts and cords can be redone without really compromising the machine. The fact that the slide plate is there is almost miraculous. You'd be hard pressed to replace a blackside plate. I'd probably pay $65 if I had it.
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I see that its threaded wrong, maybe that's why nobody wants it? It won't sew like that.
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Light running is the model. I have one that dates to 1892. Try looking up the serial number. Your decals are in better shape than mine so might be newer. I don't know how many years New Home made this model.. New Home is now Janome. Hope any of this helps.
to cabbagepatchkid. |
4 Attachment(s)
Hi.
I'm not sure if this is the best place to post this but oh well I'm sure you'll point me in the right direction. I recently bought an old sewing machine for my girlfriend as a birthday present and we were trying to figure out the brand and model. Here are some pictures: Were the decal is faded (on that blank space) it seems like it was written Sarina or something like that [ATTACH=CONFIG]505880[/ATTACH] J, C and S. Don't know the order [ATTACH=CONFIG]505881[/ATTACH] Not sure if the legs are original. They are in pretty good condition [ATTACH=CONFIG]505882[/ATTACH] You can see the head's cover on the floor to the left [ATTACH=CONFIG]505883[/ATTACH] Thanks in advance! |
Nightfox,
First Welcome!!! Second, Perfect spot. Unless you would like to open a unique thread so it can be discussed separately (totally cool) Not immediately familiar with that badge, but I'll take a look around. Based on the fact that it appears to have a full reverse, and the shape and style of that mechanism, I would guess a 1915-1935 German machine. If so it should have excellent engineering and manufacturing and be a great sewing machine.. It looks to be in great shape (a picture of the underside of the head would really help) Clean the body,wood, and mechanisms with sewing machine oil ONLY to start with. After you become more familiar with your machine and this site, we can walk you through other methods to really bring it to the best it can look and work. Congrats! |
Originally Posted by SteveH
(Post 7046161)
Nightfox,
First Welcome!!! Second, Perfect spot. Unless you would like to open a unique thread so it can be discussed separately (totally cool) Not immediately familiar with that badge, but I'll take a look around. Based on the fact that it appears to have a full reverse, and the shape and style of that mechanism, I would guess a 1915-1935 German machine. If so it should have excellent engineering and manufacturing and be a great sewing machine.. It looks to be in great shape (a picture of the underside of the head would really help) Clean the body,wood, and mechanisms with sewing machine oil ONLY to start with. After you become more familiar with your machine and this site, we can walk you through other methods to really bring it to the best it can look and work. Congrats! |
Originally Posted by NightFox17
(Post 7046169)
...What do you mean by " a full reverse"?
It appears that the stitch length adjustment lever (the big vertical silver thing on the main body(pillar)) has the ability to be placed all the way to the top and the machine would stitch in reverse (makes ending seams more secure) That feature was for the most part not available until about 1915-1920 for domestic machines. One of the really nice things about German machines of this era is that they maintained the old school method of having the needle bar "bob" once during each cycle(like a seamstress of old tugging each stitch tight) but also were early adopters of the reversible drive engineering. Makes them some of the best machines EVER to sew with. (Yes, they do make a better stitch than a modern machine) |
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