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Thursday, January 21, 2010
Tension Headaches

17 comments:
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ATTA-A-GAL Susan!!!
ReplyDeleteYes those knobs are on there for a reason!!
I have learned to do a practice piece the hard way...so will use same fabrics batting backing etc till I get it just right.
I hear there is a machine that can auto adjust tension now for all fabs and threads...OH MY GOODNESS!!!
Oh well like a new car price on it I am sure!! Out of my league!!
Pretty quilt too!
Hugs,
Lola
oooo I've always stayed away from the tension knobs. I think the older machines were much harder to find the right tensions, and once you found it, you left it alone!! Even the repair man would tell me not to touch that dial :-)
ReplyDeleteWhy have tension dials if you're not supposed to use them?
ReplyDeleteI'm glad to hear that your tension headache is a thing of the past!
OMGosh - I remember that too! DO NOT touch the tension once it is set - you'll ruin the machine!! Once I started trying free motion, the dial became my friend - I hate the loopy loops on the back! You go girl!!
ReplyDeleteLaurie
I think that our mothers told us that so we wouldn't mess up their machines!
ReplyDeleteI don't mind the tension buttons, but adjusting the tension on the bobbin scares me to death. I have a spare to play with, but it still gives me the shakes.
glad it all worked out for you!
ReplyDeleteyeah another quilt done!
Kathie
Ohh, I can totally understand your hesitance in touching it. I was told to never touch it either and to this day I haven't. Thankfully I haven't needed to!
ReplyDeleteYep on my old domestic machine I used to sweat. But on my HQ16, you're suppose to check the tension every time you put in a fresh bobbin-- at first I was so scared but I got used to it. I don't even think about it now and it does make a difference. (I guess that's why you're suppose to check it!):)
ReplyDeleteMy new pfaff 4.0 has "automatic tension adjusting"...hope I never have the need to adj. cuz there is no knob!
I play with mine way too often.
ReplyDeleteI remember it too...my mom didn't sew much but she didn't want her tension touched!
ReplyDeleteRipping out quilting though...that is a cure for it! UGH! Sorry you have to go through that.
And I thought it was only my Mom who said that every time I touched the tension we had to take the Singer to the repairman.
ReplyDeleteGood for you to have conquered the tension but I am still reluctant since I hear my Mother's voice still.
Isn't it amazing how many of us still hear our mother's voices telling us to "do" or "not do" something?!?!
ReplyDeleteI hope I haven't done that to my grown sons . . .
Makes me smile to read these comments...yep me too and I probably even said it a time or two. But now I know better...there is a reason for the dial...even if it is just the slightest of adjustment!
ReplyDeleteOooo I was getting tense just reading about your tension button. Most of the time, mine stays on 3. Guess I need to start playing a bit. Thanks for giving me permission to try. Linda
ReplyDeleteOh well done. I come from the "don't mess with that button" school of thought too. It's silly when you think about it- if you use different thicknesses of fabric, it makes sense to touch THAT button.
ReplyDeleteYes, my mom would have had a fit if we ever touched either tension. However, I have never been afraid to touch either top or bottom. That is what they are there for.
ReplyDeleteHowever, I go very, very slow when touching the bottom tension. And I keep up with how much I turn it.
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ReplyDelete