USB's are great. If you have trouble using a new one, check the size. My fancy Tajima won't read more than 1MB. It can be hard to find small ones now so I bought up big. The designs take so little room that you can get heaps on each one. Lynlee
From: h-costume-requ...@indra.com Subject: h-costume Digest, Vol 11, Issue 241 To: h-costume@mail.indra.com Date: Sun, 28 Oct 2012 12:00:01 -0600 Send h-costume mailing list submissions to h-costume@mail.indra.com To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit http://mail.indra.com/mailman/listinfo/h-costume or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to h-costume-requ...@mail.indra.com You can reach the person managing the list at h-costume-ow...@mail.indra.com When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific than "Re: Contents of h-costume digest..." --Forwarded Message Attachment--From: f...@lavoltapress.com To: h-cost...@indra.com Date: Sat, 27 Oct 2012 17:25:55 -0700 Subject: [h-cost] How to clean vintage metal presser feet? I discovered that low-shank, side-clamping vintage feet will work on my Bernina 1008 with the aid of one of the adapters sold to me with an eBay lot of modern generic feet. There are sizable box lots of suitable vintage feet on eBay, at lower prices than one Bernina foot or even most generic feet. I have avoided buying any feet that looked rusty in the photos. I still think they are grubby and I want to clean them before putting them in contact with my sewing projects. I am not sure what metal they are made of, and since they are not all the same brand and date they may not be all the same metal. My guess is steel or a steel alloy but I am not sure. Some feet appear to be chromed, most not. One of the attachments has a black finish. What is the safest way to clean them? Also, I now have several vintage rufflers and tuckers that will fit my machine because one or two of each seem to be in every box lot. They appear to be rather stiff, but I am not sure whether they are supposed to be oiled, or what. Any info from anyone who restores vintage sewing attachments would be appreciated. Fran Lavolta Press Books of historic sewing patterns www.lavoltapress.com www.facebook.com/LavoltaPress --Forwarded Message Attachment--From: costu...@radiks.net To: h-cost...@indra.com Date: Sat, 27 Oct 2012 23:53:00 -0500 Subject: Re: [h-cost] Embroiderry software This means you probably don't want a Husqvarna. While they are great machines (hubby has one and loves it), they will only use the particular USB drive sold by them. When he lost his, it was over $75 to get a new one. Sandy At 12:10 PM 10/27/2012, you wrote: >Yes, Embird seems to have a lot of fans, as offering good features >for the price. As for how the designs get onto the machine, I >definitely want a machine with a USB drive. > >Thanks, > >Fran >Lavolta Press >Books on historic sewing >www.lavoltapress.com >www.facebook.com/LavoltaPress >> >>> >>>I am thinking of buying a Brother PE770, which is a >>>fairly inexpensive dedicated embroidery machine. It takes a flash drive >>>so I can import designs from my computer. >>> >>>I want to do historic embroidery designs and I want to create or at >>>least customize my own. I'm used to using graphic design software (scan >>>editing and draw programs), but I know little about embroidery design >>>software. Any suggestions? >>> >>>Fran >>>Lavolta Press >>>Books on making historic clothing >>>www.lavoltapress.com International Costumers' Guild Archivist http://www.costume.org/gallery2/main.php "Those Who Fail to Learn History Are Doomed to Repeat It; Those Who Fail To Learn History Correctly - Why They Are Simply Doomed." Achemdro'hm "The Illusion of Historical Fact" -- C. Y. 4971 Andromeda _______________________________________________ h-costume mailing list h-costume@mail.indra.com http://mail.indra.com/mailman/listinfo/h-costume