2 MODELS OF SINGER FEATHERWEIGHTS
#1
both models were made by Singer and both are smaller and lightweight .....I saw a post by a person earlier on the board that she had purchased a Singer Featherweight for $10.00 at
a yard sale or estate sale and she was so proud to have it .... my guess is she found one of these rare little late model Featherweights ...... they also are awesome little machines
I think the little newer one was made in the 70s or 80s cant find anything on it will research it later today .......
a yard sale or estate sale and she was so proud to have it .... my guess is she found one of these rare little late model Featherweights ...... they also are awesome little machines
I think the little newer one was made in the 70s or 80s cant find anything on it will research it later today .......
the coveted older featherweight
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and the younger featherweight
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#3
Originally Posted by Prism99
The newer featherweight is not a collectible model. People sometimes do find older model featherweights for $10! However, that has become more and more rare over time....
Prism99, you are correct, but my point is that newer folks to sewing may not know that the newer featherweight is not the coveted one ..... and think they have the collectible one ....... but you are definitely right that machine is not collectible yet it may be someday because I dont think they made that many of them ...I am blessed to have both .....
#4
Super Member
Join Date: Apr 2011
Posts: 3,812
I too have a newer featherweight, bought in the early 1980's. It's a good little machine, however it does have some plastic parts inside. Learned that when I went to a quilting retreat-after three days of sewing it no longer would work. No matter what we tried it just wouldn't sew correctly. I had to resort to sewing by hand, or using a borrowed machine when another retreater wasn't using hers. It taught me an expensive lesson (five day retreat with hundreds of quilters-expensive to go to)
I now own an OLD black featherweight that sews for days on end without refusing to work.
Kat
I now own an OLD black featherweight that sews for days on end without refusing to work.
Kat
#10
Super Member
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: North Carolina - But otherwise, NOTW
Posts: 7,940
One of the definate advantages to the vintage sewing machines is that ALL the parts are metal, and they will run for 100 years or more if cared for. The newer machines have gone all plastic, and sooner or later those parts wear down and can be costly to replace.
I'll take my vintage machines any day over the modern ones!
I'll take my vintage machines any day over the modern ones!
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