Brother Luminaire Innov-ís XP1 Sewing machine.
#11
Power Poster
Thread Starter
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Southern USA
Posts: 15,947
The dealer never really stayed on the sewing part only wanted to show the embroidery capabilities. The touch screen did mess up a lot when she was using it. She blamed sweaty fingers.
It's super nice, big, impressive, and beautiful. An amazing machine for sure. I got more excited seeing the new Christmas jelly rolls that were put out while I was there.
It's super nice, big, impressive, and beautiful. An amazing machine for sure. I got more excited seeing the new Christmas jelly rolls that were put out while I was there.
#13
Super Member
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Lansing, MI
Posts: 1,038
I saw this at a local shop and told the guy I could buy a new car with that LOL He agreed and laughed too but said it does everything. well, it doesn't make coffee "yet" LOL I'm perfectly happy with my Babylock Symphony and my Elna embroidery machine. The 2 together was around $5k and that's plenty for me. LOL
#15
Super Member
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: Milton DE
Posts: 3,189
Yup upgrading is expensive. I'm a Husq person...have an SE going back to 2007 which is a combo emb/sewing w/all the bells and whistles. Back then I got it as "Open Box" sale reg price 7500 got for 4500. Now if I had to replace it would cost much less then you are talking only 13,000 if I caught a sale...reg 15,500.
Unfortunately for me once you have all those bell/whistles it's hard to live without. I quilt my quilts in the hoop, I do use all the decorative stitches. My machine can translate a photo to stitches so I took family photos from the1800's and did a History quilt for my husbands family of all the relatives going bk to Great Grandparents.
Of course in order to do this you scan photo's into computer program for SE and then tweak photos to rid shadows etc...then transfer via a cord or USB stick to SE. Now the newer machine that's replaces it has wireless WIFI....how could you not love that...no cords, usb's etc...I pray everyday my SE keeps on going because then the hard decision has to be made... of course I might find another brand cheaper but once you invest so much in hoops and parts for one brand your stuck!
Unfortunately for me once you have all those bell/whistles it's hard to live without. I quilt my quilts in the hoop, I do use all the decorative stitches. My machine can translate a photo to stitches so I took family photos from the1800's and did a History quilt for my husbands family of all the relatives going bk to Great Grandparents.
Of course in order to do this you scan photo's into computer program for SE and then tweak photos to rid shadows etc...then transfer via a cord or USB stick to SE. Now the newer machine that's replaces it has wireless WIFI....how could you not love that...no cords, usb's etc...I pray everyday my SE keeps on going because then the hard decision has to be made... of course I might find another brand cheaper but once you invest so much in hoops and parts for one brand your stuck!
#16
Super Member
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Desert Southwest
Posts: 1,314
Oh my gosh, I can't believe they sell any at all. A machine with these capabilities and price tag surely can't be designed for the hobby quilter. Onebyone has it right I think. Takes all the fun out of sewing.
#18
brother is offering dazzling bonus packages and some dealers are offering decent trade-in values for older models - particularly for dream machine2s.
for those who can afford it, and depending upon the dealer they talk to, it seems - to them - a deal too good to pass up.
lucky for me, i am not among those who can afford it.
i can explain, though, why i'd get one if i could afford it and if i didn't already have a dream machine2.
- i don't have space for a long-arm rig
- as expensive as the luminaire is, it's still less expensive than a good long-arm of decent size, on a great frame, with the computerized features and software, and with the newest software than can make a long-arm do virtually everything an embroidery machine can do.
i can't see the future so i don't know whether or not quilting is a close to extinction as we might think.
machine embroidery, though, seems to be growing in popularity among people of all ages.
i get the impression that it's easier to make money with embroidery than from quilts.
(don't quote me on that. i have no scientific data to back up that impression.)
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#19
Super Member
Join Date: May 2017
Location: Sunny Florida
Posts: 4,422
Lots of fun new features to discover and learn. I have the Dream 2 and love using it every day but might consider the new one next year or perhaps a 10 needle. First, I would need a bigger sewing room. LOL!
#20
Junior Member
Join Date: Oct 2013
Location: knoxville, tn
Posts: 173
My local store has sold 21 already (compared to 50 Dream Machines when they first came out). They have some bugs that need to be fix. There has been one update already. There are a few differences from the dream 2 but not many. BTW a new VW Jetta costs less than this machine. I'm sticking with my Dream Machine. The differences are not worth the money to me and the freebies are good only if you use them. I'm not a PE design person so getting it for free doesn't matter to me. Wait a year and the price will go down because they won't be throwing in anything "free", nothing is really free.
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