Hi, Kimberly here! I want to introduce you to my Babylock Crescendo. I had the Baby Lock Ellisimo and the Baby Lock Symphony and recently upgraded to the Babylock Crescendo. I love Baby Lock machines and I have a really bad habit of trading in for a new model every 1-2 years. I need to stay out of the sewing machine store! I like to keep my Crescendo as clean as can be. No stickers or decals. I don't even take it to retreats! My Juki TL-2010Q is my on-the-go machine that accompanies me to retreats and to classes. I also recently bought a Baby Lock Evolution Serger and I just can't wait to master it! I am currently taking classes and will be using it for the many pillowcases I make for my four kids!
My favorite feature on my Crescendo is the laser light that eliminates the need to draw a line when making half square triangles or flying geese blocks. I also love the pivoting featuring on the Crescendo. This feature leaves the presser foot up and the sewing needle in the down position. My favorite machine accessory has to be my walking foot. I use it to attach bindings, which I typically do about once a week. I have three different walking feet and use all of them!
My sewing room is very small and in a strange space, filled with corners. I do love that it is small so everything is very close together. I love the Koala Furniture but my room is too small to fit the items in my room! I purchased all of my sewing furniture, chair and machine from Sew Much More in Austin, Texas. Ron and Barbara are wonderful and if you ever need a sewing machine give them a call and let them know I sent you! I store all of fabric in white wire racks that I purchased from The Container Store 12 years ago! I store similar fabrics together. I do not like any type of clutter so I actually clear out my fabrics every year so I don’t have any fabrics around that I won’t ever use.
I currently own four machines. The first is my Bernina Virtuosa. I have an antique Singer treadle machine, in perfect working condition. I don’t ever use it, but I love antiques and this is one of my most treasured pieces. I have a Bernina 807 from the early ‘70s that belonged to my mother-in-law. I have had it serviced, so it is ready for sewing. The third machine is a light weight Bernina Activa 125, I bought when I started taking quilting classes. I purchased this machine as a ‘starter’ one, and it served me well.
My sewing room is a beloved space in my home. It is full of my mother’s quilts and many of her belongings. There is also an antique Victrola cabinet which houses my rulers and other notions. Fabric is stored in furniture chests. I have lots of family photos in the room, along with some framed needlework pieces I stitched for my mom. My cutting table which has two leaves and two drawers that are the entire depth of the table. The cabinet for housing my machine has a drop leaf on the back that can be raised whenever I’m working on a large quilt.I’m rarely alone in my sewing room – the family cat, Leviticus, is usually in the floor underneath the ironing board.
As for my other machines, my husband bought me a Viking Sewing Machine about 25 years ago and I started my “quilting” career with it. I took many quilting classes and made my first quilt with it. I keep it maintained and still use it once in a while. My second machine is the Bernina 153 QE and was purchased at Fall International Quilt Festival as a classroom machine. This machine took me to a new level of piecing and quilting and I still use it a lot! I would also love to own a Singer Featherweight, but just haven’t found the “one”!
My sewing room is very small, but it works great for me! I purchased a Koala Sewing Cabinet at International Quilt Festival several years ago and I love it. Koala had a deal that if you bought one unit you got another of the same unit “free”, so my girlfriends and I collaborated and purchased our furniture that way. My cutting table is from a catalog and opens up to be huge. Then there is my big screen TV! I wanted was a flat-screen TV with a DVD player to watch movies, but my husband interpreted this as a 60” with NO DVD player! So I sit directly across from it and feel like the characters on the screen are right in the room with me! My stash is stored in two closets, one in the sewing room and then I took over my daughter’s closet when she went to college. I store everything in Container Store “sweater” boxes and try and keep like fabrics together either by collection or color.
What fabulous sewing rooms! The machines are great also! It is nice to find out what kinds of machines other people use and that they have more than one! This post has given me some ideas for a sewing room when I finally get one! Including the TV set.
ReplyDeleteJudith
Wow...what lovely machines and lovely spaces! Thanks for sharing ladies...what a treat to get a little peek into your lives. =)
ReplyDeleteEveryone is so tidy!!! Love visiting all the rooms.
ReplyDeleteThe best part about this post? You all make me feel so normal! I own four machines--three sewing machines and a serger.
ReplyDeleteThe worst part? You've made me realize how incredibly disorganized my stash is.
Nice sewing spaces, ladies.
Just got the Bernina 750QE, so excited to learn all the features. But I am hoping everyone cleaned up their space for these photos....mine doesn't look so organized!
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing all the info about your machines & sewing spaces.
ReplyDeleteThat was fun, thank you for sharing all of your machines and sewing rooms!
ReplyDeleteMy question is to Cheryl, regarding her Bernina, Anne. I have that very same sewing machine and I love her dearly. What is the no. of the curved foot that you have for it?
ReplyDeleteI think I need one.
Thanks for sharing.
Nettie
In my sewing room, a Bernina QE 440 that I am still learning everything that it does!
ReplyDeleteMy second machine in a Centennial Singer Featherweight, which I dearly love. Great for piecing!
I have a Bernina 200E and a Bernina 1030. Love them both.
ReplyDeleteCheryl uses the Curve Master Presser Foot, it is not a Bernina foot but it comes with attachments that make it usable with most machines! Hope that helps!
ReplyDeleteWow, great post and I love meeting all of you ladies and the machines that you sew on!
ReplyDeleteOh my what gorgeous sewing studios and wonderful machines you ladies have. I am reeling over the fact that Kimberly gets new machine so often...That just blows my mind..Don't mean tha tin a bad way either. Just envious as can be. And te be abel to sort through and clean out fabrics every year. wow again. I am way too much a pack rat and have to save all mine to collect enough to make quilts with. I also enjoy recycling scraps from my moms alterations shop to use in quilting. So do you like the Cresendo a lot more than the Ellisimo? I love my Ellisimo. I have had it four years now. Got one of the firs tones to come out. Waited rather impatiently for em to ship to my dealer. Cheryl I love that antique machine in the pictures. It is gorgeous. Do u sew on it sometimes still? Or is it for decor purposes? Debbie I love all the white furniture in your sewing room. Very nice indeed.. That sewing table is just amazeing in itself.
ReplyDeleteLove this! So interesting to read about your machines, I ma a Bernia girl,but who knows ,that new Janome Kimberly has sounds wonderful!
ReplyDeleteDebbie, that You Sew Girl quilt in your photos, tell me more about it,love the patchwork with those big flowers! If it is a current pattern,how could I ahve missed that? bonniesline@aol.com
Thanks for sharing your sewing spaces with us. I enjoy seeing how others utilize space.
ReplyDeleteHi Ladies!
ReplyDeleteI wanted to pop by and thank you all so very much for posting in our hop! It was absolutely fantastic to read more about all of you, your spaces, and especially, the machines you all sew with!
Thank you again for participating, I have received several emails from people saying that this hop has been invaluable to them in deciding which machine will be their next!
xo
Erin
Thanks for sharing!!
ReplyDeleteDebbie's quilt is from an In the Beginning Fabrics project sheet from quite some time ago, and the You Sew Girl is a sign propped in front of the quilt!
ReplyDelete