Home > Homemaking, Sewing > An old friend

An old friend

May 20th, 2008

I spent a good part of the day cleaning. Not my usual M.O., but the house needed it. I suppose it’s some sort of freakish nesting-by-proxy, as my friend just had a baby on Friday. (Congratulations, Katie!)

It’s funny, but even though I don’t consider myself a very good housekeeper, I always accomplish so much more on a day that I get down to cleaning. I know that my Dad will get what I’m trying to say. It’s like my brain has to be organized and put away before I can be really productive, and organizing my surroundings is the only way to do it. Today, for example, I did two loads of laundry (Olga matches and puts away all of her and Gavin’s socks and underwear), all the dishes (Olga puts away the silverware), scrubbed all the gunk from around the sink (gunk seems to build up very fast in this climate), cleaned out the refrigerator (Gavin ate most of the cheese and tomatoes before I could put them away again), vacuumed the main areas of the house (both children run around squealing … very funny), made two loaves of bread with my cooking helpers (wheat yeast bread and banana quick bread), and even attempted to remove some stains from the carpet (unsuccessful, as of yet).

And then after breakfast ….

Just kidding, but actually I got all that done by three in the afternoon, and then I swilled down another cup of coffee and played for the rest of the afternoon. And by play, I mean I dug all of the sewing machines out of the closet to fiddle with them. My old Viking and my Singer embroidery machine have been in the closet since we moved here, because my sewing desk is only comfortably big enough for two machines, and really, I can’t sew on four machines at once anyway… In the back of my mind I remembered that there was something wrong with my Viking since the last time I took it in for service, and hauling it out of the closet revealed all — it is caked — CAKED — with grease. I don’t know what kind of “oil” the technician used on my machine, but he certainly gobbed enough of it on there to keep it from rusting… and enough to attract every particle of fiber in the county to stick to the gears. So this evening I cleaned it out, then ran it hard for a while to heat up the oil and get it flowing. Now it’s running great, and all that is left to do is to change the light bulb, which blinks on and off.

This machine is great. My mom bought it at a thrift store for around $20, if I recall right. It was my very first sewing machine, and I used it to make a LOT of stuff in high school, including the first shirt I ever made for Erik, back when he was only 15. It’s a Viking 4700, probably built in the 70s, if the color scheme is any indication (dark brown, tan, orange). It’s a machine that would make any do-it-yourself kind of person proud: it’s so easy to open up to get at the guts that I’ll probably never take it to the shop again. The body and innards are all metal, so unless it gets hit by a truck, I doubt I’ll ever have to worry about replacing any parts (except for that light bulb). And the best thing of all about this machine, is that it makes such beautiful, consistent stitches. Even my newer Viking, which is my every day machine, can’t quite match up to this one. Because it’s mechanical, and not digital, I can fine-tune stitch length all I want and not worry about presets. Really the only drawback I can think of is that it’s difficult to sew slowly, so I use the hand wheel a lot more with this machine…

Oh, sorry… you all must think I’ve completely lost it to be oozing over an old sewing machine, but the truth is that I fell in love with it again today while I was tinkering with it. I did see a close cousin, the model 4500 for sale, which is only a slightly scaled down version of my machine. If I needed another machine, I’d definitely snag it.

Homemaking, Sewing

  1. May 20th, 2008 at 03:12 | #1

    Old machines are great – it’s worth some effort to keep them working.

    You’re a little younger than me, and your Dad is a little younger than my Dad, but our Grandparents and Great-grandparents probably work out to pretty close in age, and lived through the Great Depression. And they had a saying…

    “Use it up; wear it out; make it do, or do without”.

    Making an old machine work is certainly within that paradigm :)

    Keep up the good work Annie, and please write more!

  2. caroline
    May 20th, 2008 at 18:24 | #2

    annie, your brain and my brain must be cousins! ikwym about needing some neatness and organization to be productive. loved your post today. the “rambling” about your sewing machine spoke to my heart.

    i’m thinking that someday, when we next cruise down the east coast, i’d love to meet you and your family. hopefully, this idea is mutual, cause if you ever cruise “up” the east coast, y’all can stay at my house.

  3. May 20th, 2008 at 23:42 | #3

    You adviced me a while ago to go with something older and hardier. You’re absolutely right! I’ve been so pleased with my old 731 Bernina. I love that I can flip open the top and peak inside, and it’s great cause my kids are always putting push pins in my machines…and with this, it’s not a big deal, I can get them out again. It’s been about a year and a half I bought it off ebay and it’s been my main machine ever since.

  4. Ruth
    May 21st, 2008 at 17:43 | #4

    I’ve only had one new machine in 40+ years of sewing that was really any good–an older. plainer, Dressmaker model that I used for years. My favorite is an old Singer ZigZag from the seventies that my grand mother bought new. She used it, her daughter used it, I used it, and my mother-in-law and sister-in-law all used it! It finally wore out. I tried to replace it once and got taken by an unscrupulous sewing machine company. I finally found another on ebay recently and I’m in heaven. The person I bought it from even had the embroidery cams just like the ones I gave away when my old machine died. Talk about a happy, happy woman now. In fact, the machine I’ve been using is an older one from a junk store that just needed a little timing to run right. There is nothing like an older machine you really love, especially when they do just what you need!

  5. May 22nd, 2008 at 15:55 | #5

    My machine is not that old. Only ten years or so. it’s been through several moves and is still kicking. I so want to get an embroidery machine! I’m hoping my hubby will let me get one soon!

  6. June 2nd, 2008 at 04:14 | #6

    Hi Annie,

    I love your blog!

  7. Kerstin
    June 7th, 2008 at 15:34 | #7

    Hello, just wanted to say hi, I loved my old Singer Machine in Germany, my Grandmom revised it from a manual to an electric sewing Maschine, so whenever i wanted to i could take the Motor off and did my sewing manualy. Too bad i didn’t bring it to the states with me I miss that Maschine. Later on my Mom bought me a newer Singer with all digital , and I had to leave that one at my sisters since we have over there 220V and here it is only110V. Hope everybody is in good health at your house, here in South Jersey the weather got very, very, very humid and 95 degrees. Have to do my Garden work in the early morning or late afternoon. Kerstin

  8. jessica
    June 15th, 2008 at 15:20 | #8

    You know, since this blog started I’ve always checked it daily and loved the content. Lately, the posts are futher and futher apart and I wonder if I should delete it from my bookmarks or if it will pick back up. It’s been almost a month… WHERE ARE YOU ANNIE?

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