I saw some chat on one of the sewing forums the other day concerning repainting vintage sewing machines and that brought to mind the industrial Singer 96-10 that I re-finished a while back. Industrial sewing machines are built to work for many years with minimal maintenance in a factory setting. While the guts are strong, the paint coat is another story; it’s the weakest part of an industrial sewing machine. of the 15 +/- industrial machines I own, at least half have been repainted, partially or fully. I have seen many industrial machines that were in perfect working order that looked like they had been dragged from Boston to Miami behind a cement truck. My 96-10 didn’t exactly fit that description, but it was pretty bad. I found the sewing head in a thrift shop for $30. The slide plate and bobbin case were missing and the thread take-up lever was broken off. Less than $50 of parts later had it sewing just fine, but still looking sad, so I decided to refresh the paint with automotive paint and a couple of coats of clear topcoat for protection.
There was no rust, so I didn’t need to clean out a lot of pits and fill them in, I just sanded, primed, and painted. I removed everything I could from the exterior of the machine to avoid taping. Impatient as I am, the whole project took less than a day, and most of that was waiting for coats of paint to dry. Those of you with sharp eyes will notice that the paint on the horizontal arm in photo 3 is smoother than that in photo 4 – that’s because I was a bit too hasty in attempting to apply a Singer decal and didn’t wait until the paint had sufficiently cured. Regardless, it looks much better and still sews like it should. I just pulled it out last week and lubed it up and have been sewing small projects with it. If I can find the “before” photo, I will show you the 111W155 that I resurrected another time.
Hi Ed and Greetings from Canada,
ReplyDeleteI need your help! I recently purchased a Necchi Lelia 513 complete with manual and accessories for $50.
The machine weighs a ton. It desperately needed cleaning and oiling. It won't zig-zag it appears to be stuck..do you have any ideas how I can unstick it? Also do you know how old this machine is? I tried to access your Necchi pages but the link did not work.
Hi Ed,Gayle from Canada and I was wondering
ReplyDeleteif you could send me the pictures of your recent refurb and paint of your 96-10. The DH brought home a 96-40 last summer curb scrapping and while it seems to move smothly it does need cosmetic help.
I would love to refinish the exterior but cannot get a decent sized
picture from the blog to see what you did. Any hints would be
appreciated.
I still miss you on the lists.
farracres@ebtech.net
Any tips for a newbie looking at painting a sad 221? It runs well, is complete but is ugly and the decals are bad.
ReplyDeleteI can't find much on this subject. It seems like it's frowned upon. But I'm looking to give new life to my cute FW.
I'm imaging a way to learn to airbrush some of those cool motorcycle designs! But first I want to learn to do the basic paint. :-)
How about a tutorial with recommended products? Thanks!