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Home » Article » Others A Look at Embroidery Sewing Machines
Alison Cole filed under "Others"
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With the rapid advancement in technology for electric sewing
machines a machine for every type of stitch was being born. It
took several tries, however, to come up with a machine that
could handle the task of embroidery.
Thomas Stone and James Henderson were granted a French patent in
1804 for "a machine that emulated hand sewing." That same year a
patent was granted to Scott John Duncan for an "embroidery
machine with multiple needles." The machines of all three men
were unsuccessful and never came to being. It wasn't until 1860,
that Isaak Groebli combined previous hand looming techniques
with existing sewing machine technology to create the first
embroidery sewing machine.
The technology advanced greatly in 1911 when the Singer Sewing
Company developed the first multi-head embroidery sewing machine
with six heads and a pantograph attachment. It wasn't until the
1950s that more advancements were introduced and technology
continued to advance with computerization. During this decade,
advancements in the sale of licensing rights and
mass-merchandising opened up the market for factory-based
embroidered items. Today embroidery sewing machines are used
every day worldwide, some with up to thirty different heads,
though most jobs require only the smaller machines.
Industrial sewing machines, like their domestic counterparts for
the home seamstress, were created to simplify and speed up the
otherwise labor-intensive hand stitching. Higher-end sewing
machine models developed for the home often feature a hoop
attachment and an embroider stitch mode. Crafters and
seamstresses, who would use this feature, were frequently
frustrated at having to constantly change out the different
thread colors. Today's advanced embroider sewing machines
feature single or multi-heads for different spools of thread and
are as easily available to the home seamstress as to the large
garment factory. Many machine-embroidered items are created in
small home-based businesses with affordable, easy-to-use,
computer-operated embroidery sewing machines that do not require
a lot of room. Specialized attachments allow for embroidery to
be added to a variety of pre-manufactured products and fabrics,
as well as the addition of sequins and other fancy enhancements.
About the author:
Sewing Machines
Info provides detailed information about industrial,
embroidery, antique sewing machines, and sewing machines parts,
as well as reviews of best sewing machine manufacturers. Sewing
Machines Info is the sister site of Vending Machines Web.
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