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Originally Posted by Lady Diana
(Post 8300695)
... all of their "heirloom" stitches were wonky. ...
the difference between a 9" space and the size of the M7 would make a huge difference. just not huge enough for me to rush to buy one. for that money i could get a machine with a wide throat which also does embroidery. |
Originally Posted by fruitloop
(Post 8300718)
One thing about the new high end do all machines of any brand; the updates for it are usually around $700 or more per update. There are great deals to be had on trade ins for the newest machine. It pays to stay one step under the newest. There will always be a newest.
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Originally Posted by fruitloop
(Post 8300718)
One thing about the new high end do all machines of any brand; the updates for it are usually around $700 or more per update. There are great deals to be had on trade ins for the newest machine. It pays to stay one step under the newest. There will always be a newest.
Babylock/Brother upgrades are through the dealers and do cost accordingly. Just a difference in definitions between updates & upgrades for these. |
Originally Posted by wishfulthinking
(Post 8300043)
Just wondering if anyone has seen/tried this new machine....and what does it cost? Would love to have that much throat space!
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i know what i said in an earlier post, but it's time to confess ....
if i had the money i would buy this machine in a heartbeat. especially since my dealer always charges less than MSRP. |
I have been drooling over this machine since It came out...
Rob |
My review of the M7 Continental
I bought this machine a couple of days prior to Thanksgiving. I had literally sold my home and was moving. I didn't really begin to use it until January (Move + Holidays, etc.)
I'm working on three quilts concurrently, and I sew an hour or two daily after work, and in this nasty Pacific NW winter weather, my Saturday & Sunday is usually dedicated to quilting. (Yeah, I'm single, and my kids are grown lol) This machine was a graduation for me. I've sewn for years, but hadn't touched a machine until a couple of years ago, a friend suggested I learn to quilt as a mechanism for dealing w/stress. I'd bought a little 189.00 Brother Laura Ashley machine on Amazon, made a queen sized quilt, and was hooked. I knew I needed more throat space if I was going to continue quilting. After building a spreadsheet, and listing all the needs/wants, I looked at every machine out there. Elna, Bernina, Pfaff, Brother, Viking... I spent time in the sewing shops testing all of them. I spent hours on the mfg websites reading details, read forums, googled pros/cons of each brand. By the end of 2 months of research, the Continental was clearly the winner. Stitches are like silk. I see many complain about "wonky stitches" - those are the stitches, and purposely designed this way to emulate hand stitching. I don't find the heirloom stitches to be "wonky", but that's just me. All other stitches flow like butter. I paid 5999.99 for my machine. I received several Kim Einman(sp?) rulers, her BOM pattern and one of her jelly rolls, along with a rolling bag in addition to the machine. This "bonus" package was not a big deal (IMHO). I'm not one to ever turn down more quilt rulers... LOL The BOM wasn't anything awe -inspiring, and the jelly roll pack came in handy for another quilt, so I did ok there. :) I'm just saying this "Bonus" package wasn't something that would be a deal breaker. The design of the rolling bag is poor b/c of the handle placement. THe bag itself is fine, but that handle placement was just plain . Imagine a rectangle, and the pull handle is on the narrow end - which means it'd be easy to topple the cart because this is a LARGE machine.Furthermore, there's I'm hauling this machine back/forth to the shop for "lessons". LOL I am risking my investment like that. After I moved, I found a local sewing shop, and he sells the same package (machine/pkg) for 5k - too bad I didn't know about this vendor! LOL (If you're interested and in North Seattle area - lemme know, I will provide the name. Wonderful folks)
Because I plan to move cross country by year's end, I wasn't going to invest in an expensive cabinet - but I needed something large enough because, it's a pretty good sized machine. I went to Home Depot, and purchased a HUSKY brand height-adjustable work bench. The bench/table is 47" wide, has two nice ball bearing track drawers (the nice ones like in a fancy rolling tool box). The base is white, the top is a thick butcher block - AND - has a hand crank that will raise the table from 29" to 43". The caster rollers (incl.) are great, so I can move the table if needed, and do so easily - even on carpet. If I used the optional stationary feet (also included) I believe that would change the table height to a range of 26-40". Assembled myself in about 30 minutes, looks nice and neat in my sewing area (i.e. not like it's a garage piece in the house) and it's VERY solid. If you decide to take the jump, just know you're NOT going to have to pay 8k. Careful shopping, and you can find the machine for 5k. It's very easy to use - the spiral bound manual is pretty darn comprehensive. |
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I am in Australia and I just purchased this machine this week. I now have it set up on a bench in my sewing room but I am waiting to purchase the purpose table for it which will be released in Australia in April. I paid $6699.00 Aus dollars for it and I believe the table is going to be $1,500.00 Aus dollars. I know this is an expensive machine but with the brushless motor it is said to outlast the life of any other machine three times longer, so I figure it will outlast me. I haven't used this machine yet except for stitching a few of the stitches and I have downloaded the Acu Spark App. I will be seriously trying it out on the weekend. It looks so much bigger in my sewing room than what it did in the store!!
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Originally Posted by Betty J
(Post 8362257)
. I know this is an expensive machine but with the brushless motor it is said to outlast the life of any other machine three times longer, so I figure it will outlast me.
I love Janome machines, am a dedicated Janome girl ;) |
Is this machine easy to use? I am tossing up between this and a Bernina, but I am worried the Bernina would be difficult to learn.
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