My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Discover knitting, crochet, scrapbooking and art and craft ideas on this forum.

Arts and crafts

Dd7 wants a sewing machine

12 replies

JiltedJohnsJulie · 28/08/2014 09:40

And I'm ashamed to admit that I've never used one and haven't sewn since primary school.

Any suggestions on a first one?

OP posts:
Report
tryingtocatchthewind · 28/08/2014 09:47

I haven't used it but there's a good basic one in Ikea which is very reasonably priced (under £50). I would think she'll be fine with that to mess around on for now and see how the hobby grows.

Report
KarenHL · 28/08/2014 10:07

John Lewis sell a mini version for under £50. It might be easier to use, being a bit smaller - although I believe some people get this one if they have limited space.

JL's machines are made by Janome. The mini comes in lots of lovely colours (I nearly got one for myself but decided on a standard one as the mini does seem aimed at children). I have a JL machine myself and would say it is a good one.

It is worth getting her some lessons for Christmas? Some shops do classes (I know the big John Lewis closest to me helps with setting things up and troubleshooting - a big store near you might do the same).

Report
Lonecatwithkitten · 28/08/2014 16:33

I have had a long chat with the manager of haberdashery in my local John lewis. She doesn't recommend the two John lewis machines as they can quite quickly grow out of them. She recommends the basic Singer as she said it could be a lifetime purchase.

Report
JiltedJohnsJulie · 28/08/2014 17:58

Thank you to everyone who has posted so far. Will have a look at the JL ones. I've also spotted this one. What does everyone think?

I've already bought her My first seeing machine book and will get her some nice materials next week when she's back in school.

OP posts:
Report
jerryfudd · 28/08/2014 18:18

I would go for a basic singer or brother over the John Lewis mini ones. I've been self teaching myself and know I'd be upgrading if I'd only got the mini so not cost effective. Also, you could try it yourself and see if it's something you want to get into as it can be a very handy skill

Report
laura2323 · 28/08/2014 18:21

Hobby craft have a small basic one for about £20. I've just bought one for myself. Very easy to use and lightweight

Report
andmyunpopularopionis · 28/08/2014 18:23

I got dd the £20 one from hobbycraft. Has about 7 stiches on it and is perfect for a starter machine.

Report
WhoKnowsWhereTheTimeGoes · 28/08/2014 18:24

My DD started using my full size one this year and has had no problems (I have to help with threading and setting up). I could do with lessons myself TBH, I'm not very good with it but would love to improve.

Report
JiltedJohnsJulie · 28/08/2014 19:43

Right so we are going to get a proper one, not a mini one. Can anyone suggest some accessories to go with it?

OP posts:
Report
crockydoodle · 29/08/2014 08:38

You need a small pair of scissors for snipping thread, a pair for cutting fabric, some pins, a pincushion, lots of thread, a measuring tape for starters

Report
lavendersun · 29/08/2014 08:45

Glad to see you re buying a proper one - my parents bought my daughter the small JL one - what a load of rubbish that was (very quickly ended up at the charity shop!).

I still have the hand turn Singer machine I used when I was little - not sure if you want that sort of thing but I think you can still pick them up for about £40. My daughter (just 8) uses it to make dolls clothes and really loves it. Goes at their pace, easy to use, simple to maintain and looks great.

Report
Lonecatwithkitten · 29/08/2014 08:56

Also ordinary sewing needles as there will always be some items you need to hand finish.
My DD (10) adores the sewing bee and it helps her see why taking the time to learn the basics is important.

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.