I am not a sewing person but I am a shade tree engineer by trade and these machines are the most interesting I have ever seen. Sometimes I run it just to watch it sew a chain. LOL
I recently got into the embroidery business as ahobby and have played…
hi Mike I'm a dealer for Merrow for over 30 years i would use t-35 a&e wildcat thread for great coverage and is cheaper than woolly nylon and easier to use
I HAVE BEEN DEALING WITH MERROW MACHINES FOR 35 YEARS.MY PARENTS HAD A DRESS SHOP IN 1969.ALL THERE WAS MERROW MACHINES MR.RELIABLE THIS MACHINE IS A TANK CAN NOT BE BROKEN.SO I BECAME INTERESTED IN REPAIRING MACHINES.I'M A DEALER FOR MERROW SEWING MACHINE PLUS OTHER SEWING MACHINES I LOVE THIS MACHINE THE MOST BECAUSE YOU CAN USE DIFFRENT PARTS IN IT.TO SEW DIFFRENT APPLICATIONS.SO YES BUY A MERROW U.S.A.
I am not a sewing person but I am a shade tree engineer by trade and these machines are the most interesting I have ever seen. Sometimes I run it just to watch it sew a chain. LOL
I recently got into the embroidery business as ahobby and have played around with my old A Class Merrow to get it to stitch emblem edging. After cutting, shaving, welding or soldering dogs, plates and loopersand after and wrapping a few bandaids around my finger tips and have finally come up with a very nice edge on my emblems. I will try the t-35 Wildcat Plus and see if it improves my stitch. Where do you normally get the thread?
I think I figured it out.
I start with about a 4-6" chain.
I start sewing with the edge under the needle.
No cutter,(the material is precut and fixed to a freely rotating platform)
When it comes around to the end I make sure I pull the…
Machine= MG-3DW-4 No. 5 needle, T-70 thread.What is the most attractive way to lock-in the start and finish stitching when sewing circular objects?Thanks.DougSee More