Cheapest machine: an 1892 Singer 27 VS machine I paid five bucks for. It was being used as a doorstop in an antique store because it was "frozen." So I oiled it. It worked just fine. We have four machines at present: A nice little Singer 27 vibrating shuttle machine with a handcrank that I use for making hats. A Singer 66 in a ratty 5-drawer treadle that both my wife and I use most at the moment. A Singer 240W13 industrial chainstitch machine that I want to get working in a Universal Treadle Table. (UTT allows you to swap machines/heads quickly -- machine collectors like them and I need something to accommodate the other machine...) A Pfaff 130. I've been looking for a good sturdy machine with reverse and ZZ stitches that can be treadled. This will be my new go-to machine and will make it easier to learn interesting stuff like making shirts... The 66 I bought for $50 from a friend whose wife wanted him to take off all the "trash" and make her a table out of the irons. I just handed him cash and we put it in my truck and I took it home. Then I discovered it came with a full set of attachments including two buttonholers. In return I found him a set of old irons that were rusted solid but could be repainted as table legs -- which was how I came to buy the doorstop. Hmmm.
Dr. Charles A. Hays
The Kilted Perfesser
Laird in Residence, Blathering-at-the-Lectern
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