Is this circle stitcher complete?
#1
Super Member
Thread Starter
Join Date: Feb 2012
Posts: 8,091
Is this circle stitcher complete?
We are watching this circle stitcher on GW and so far nobody has bid on it.
My wife thinks it's incomplete, I don't know. And the text says it's for a Touch and Sew, will this fit other slant stitch machines?
Can someone tell us what's what on this one?
http://www.shopgoodwill.com/auctions...-11378905.html
Joe
My wife thinks it's incomplete, I don't know. And the text says it's for a Touch and Sew, will this fit other slant stitch machines?
Can someone tell us what's what on this one?
http://www.shopgoodwill.com/auctions...-11378905.html
Joe
#2
Super Member
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: western ny
Posts: 1,535
I have the same one. It has the same parts. I bought it at a garage sale. I never used it because I do not have a touch and sew. I thought I would try it on another machine but never have. Will be watching to see if anyone has a answer. Do you have a touch and sew?
#4
Yes, it's complete. Bar the instructions, which I don't see, but the stitcher itself is entire.
FYI, they can be used with *any* machine, as long as it has a screw hole on the bed for a seam guide-that's where this screws into. (With the right hand screw, in the square.) The square piece slides back and forth along the stem, so your circles can be any size. The button on the left end covers a short spike, like a thumb tack. The fabric gets stuck on there, in the center of the circle, and you put the button back on so you don't poke yourself. Then put the foot down and sew-the fabric will spin in place on the spike and you'll get a circle.
It does take some practice, but is fairly easy to get the hang of, and really does make great circles!
FYI, they can be used with *any* machine, as long as it has a screw hole on the bed for a seam guide-that's where this screws into. (With the right hand screw, in the square.) The square piece slides back and forth along the stem, so your circles can be any size. The button on the left end covers a short spike, like a thumb tack. The fabric gets stuck on there, in the center of the circle, and you put the button back on so you don't poke yourself. Then put the foot down and sew-the fabric will spin in place on the spike and you'll get a circle.
It does take some practice, but is fairly easy to get the hang of, and really does make great circles!
#6
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: Illinois...near St. Louis
Posts: 392
You can actually do the same thing with a thumbtack & a piece of tape. Stick the point of the tack into the tape with the sticky side facing the head of the tack. Stick it to the bed of the machine (pointy side up) however far from the needle that you want the center of your circle to be (5" circle= 2.5" from needle). Stick fabric on thumbtack (right side up)...& sew! The fabric pivots on the tack & will feed thru the machine in a circle.
#9
Senior Member
Join Date: Jul 2012
Posts: 319
That's the same one I have for my Touch & Sew 636. "Straight stitch, plain zig-zag, or decorative zig-zag stitching....to produce endless variety of symmetrical circles, scallops, and geometric motifs." Nice and simple, does what it says it does. Good luck.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
jetnica
Pictures
26
06-28-2010 10:59 AM
Quilt4u
General Chit-Chat (non-quilting talk)
7
05-27-2010 12:08 PM