Old sewing machines

Author(s)

    • Head, Carol

Bibliographic Information

Old sewing machines

Carol Head

(Shire album, 84)

Shire Publications, 1982

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Note

Description based on 1986 printing

Bibliography: p. 32

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In 1790, Thomas Saint took out a patent on a machine for sewing leather. Though he probably made only an experimental model, it was the first ever sewing machine. The key to producing a successful sewing machine is that its needle, unlike the needle in hand sewing, must not pass right through the material to form the stitch, because a continuous supply of thread is required. In 1807, Edward Chapman invented a machine using such a needle, with the point and the eye at the same end. By the middle of the nineteenth century, significant developments had been achieved in Europe and the United States, and in 1850, Isaac Merritt Singer, whose name was to become synonymous with sewing machines, made his first machine. Singer combined technical ability with marketing flair, but he did not lack capable rivals, among them Allen B. Wilson. As a result, the manufacture and use of sewing machines grew rapidly in North America and Europe, including Britain.

Table of Contents

A history of the sewing machine Early industrial machines Toy machines Collecting old sewing machines Further reading Places to visit

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