I found this at the flea-market, together with a box of about a hundred Singer machine-needles, for $5. It is an original 1930s SINGER No. 99 sewing-machine instruction-manual, which I automatically snapped up to add to my grandmother’s machine.
Here is the manual:
It’s all complete and in great condition. There’s no rips, tears, stains, missing pages or loose bits about to fall off. I know you can get scanned reprint copies off the internet for free, but they’re never as nice as having the real thing. You print those out and you have no idea how to get them bound, the pictures are horrible, the size is SO inconvenient and they’re not always *precisely* what you want, but you gotta take it because you can’t find anything else!
This little manual is conveniently sized so that it fits comfortably in your hand, and you can store it easily in the compartment underneath the machine-bed, along with the electric-motor installation manual that I bought previously:
I also bought this neat little box of machine-needles:
This box is REALLY small! It’s about 2/3 to 1/2 the size of a regular 50-a-box matchbox. But it holds something like 90 or more needles! I’ll never need to buy any more for the rest of my life!…Okay maybe a few more…
Still on the lookout for more stuff.
Congratulation on your latest find!!!! Mine is working but the tension is bad.. I know i need to fix it but how…..and I do not want to spend a fortune on it.
I have a tutorial about fixing vintage sewing-machines on my blog. It’s in the “Singer Sewing Machines” category, somewhere. Do a search for it. Tension can be a pain, especially with the older machines. It’s just a matter of trial and error.
Thanks… I shall look into it.
Congratulation on your latest find!!!! Mine is working but the tension is bad.. I know i need to fix it but how…..and I do not want to spend a fortune on it.
I have a tutorial about fixing vintage sewing-machines on my blog. It’s in the “Singer Sewing Machines” category, somewhere. Do a search for it. Tension can be a pain, especially with the older machines. It’s just a matter of trial and error.
Thanks… I shall look into it.