Handheld crafting iron
#32
Power Poster
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: California
Posts: 14,723
Originally Posted by thepolyparrot
I have the original Clover and once I learned (here on this board! ;) ) that you have to cycle it off and on a few times to get it to heat up enough, it's been great for the starch-method of preparing applique pieces.
I'm thinking of getting one with interchangeable tips, though. The plate on this one is actually too big sometimes - a wand shape or a very small flat shape would work better on some pieces.
I also have a cute little Sharptek iron that is really great for this type of applique, for pressing seams on blocks and for paper foundation piecing. Aside from being cute as can be, they're really good for places where you need a larger sole plate. http://polymerclayexpress.com/equip.html
I'm thinking of getting one with interchangeable tips, though. The plate on this one is actually too big sometimes - a wand shape or a very small flat shape would work better on some pieces.
I also have a cute little Sharptek iron that is really great for this type of applique, for pressing seams on blocks and for paper foundation piecing. Aside from being cute as can be, they're really good for places where you need a larger sole plate. http://polymerclayexpress.com/equip.html
#33
Originally Posted by sewnsewer2
Had one, gave it away, never got hot enough for me.
#35
Glad you got it and that it's working for you. I like mine, too. Is the plug staying in on the side of the iron? Mine kept pulling out with the slightest tug, so I glued it in with E6000. I might have said that already - the memory isn't what it used to be. ;)
I haven't had time to play with the Textile Tool yet, but I'm looking forward to having such a teeny little sole plate. :)
I haven't had time to play with the Textile Tool yet, but I'm looking forward to having such a teeny little sole plate. :)
#37
Member
Join Date: Jan 2017
Posts: 2
Sharptek is basically an amazing iron to handle. Nothing gets in this iron's way- not even the cord.only the docking cradle is plugged in, no more cords! Simply switch the dial to cord to use as a conventional iron. This cord/cordless iron gives you powerful steam and features temperature control and variable steam control, so you can adjust them for fabrics. The iron is totally not clumsy, maybe the base, but the benefit of cordless overrides.
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