Skip to content

Piero Bosio Social Web Site Personale Logo Fediverso

Social Forum federato con il resto del mondo. Non contano le istanze, contano le persone

Is #sewing fedi a thing?

Uncategorized
6 3 15
  • Is fedi a thing? If so, I have a question.

    My 10 year old is incredibly crafty, and loves making outfits for her toys. My wife and I think getting her a simple sewing machine would be a hit.

    Are there any beginner-friendly machines we should look at? Say in the $50 range. We've found options but we don't really know how to judge if they're decent or not.

  • Is fedi a thing? If so, I have a question.

    My 10 year old is incredibly crafty, and loves making outfits for her toys. My wife and I think getting her a simple sewing machine would be a hit.

    Are there any beginner-friendly machines we should look at? Say in the $50 range. We've found options but we don't really know how to judge if they're decent or not.

    @Bfordham Hi. It's amazing that you want to get your child a sewing machine! If you think she will stick with it, maybe it's worth spending a bit more. A sewing machine is something that will serve you for years. It's worth going into a local sewing machine shop and having a word with them. That way you will also find tech support for the machine.

  • @Bfordham Hi. It's amazing that you want to get your child a sewing machine! If you think she will stick with it, maybe it's worth spending a bit more. A sewing machine is something that will serve you for years. It's worth going into a local sewing machine shop and having a word with them. That way you will also find tech support for the machine.

    @TazPoltorak Thanks for the advice. We've considered a more expensive one. We think if she shows any real interest and sticks to it we'll upgrade her to something that will last.

  • @TazPoltorak Thanks for the advice. We've considered a more expensive one. We think if she shows any real interest and sticks to it we'll upgrade her to something that will last.

    @Bfordham @TazPoltorak I'm not sure about prices in the US, but if they are vaguely close to ours there is a serious risk that a $50 machine would just not work properly, cause your daughter lots of frustration and let her just drop the hobby.

    if (and it's a huge if) you have a sewing machine shop in your area I'd recommend looking for a basic, fully mechanical, vintage model: it will cost a bit more than $50 (maybe $100, or something aroundish that?), but it would be something that works reliably.

    Then, if your daughter doesn't stick to sewing, the same shop can buy it back, since there is a decent market for those, and unless some *really* bad accident happened that made it hard to repair you may not have paid more than $50 on the whole thing.

    And if the interest sticks, depending on her tastes she may want to upgrade to something fancier with more features, or she may already have her lifelong machine (or both, but that's likely to happen when it won't be your budget problem anymore :D )

    (if you don't have a shop nearby that's more of an issue, since buying those machines online or from private sellers comes with a significant risk that they require significant maintenance before they are brought back to working reliably)

  • @Bfordham @TazPoltorak I'm not sure about prices in the US, but if they are vaguely close to ours there is a serious risk that a $50 machine would just not work properly, cause your daughter lots of frustration and let her just drop the hobby.

    if (and it's a huge if) you have a sewing machine shop in your area I'd recommend looking for a basic, fully mechanical, vintage model: it will cost a bit more than $50 (maybe $100, or something aroundish that?), but it would be something that works reliably.

    Then, if your daughter doesn't stick to sewing, the same shop can buy it back, since there is a decent market for those, and unless some *really* bad accident happened that made it hard to repair you may not have paid more than $50 on the whole thing.

    And if the interest sticks, depending on her tastes she may want to upgrade to something fancier with more features, or she may already have her lifelong machine (or both, but that's likely to happen when it won't be your budget problem anymore :D )

    (if you don't have a shop nearby that's more of an issue, since buying those machines online or from private sellers comes with a significant risk that they require significant maintenance before they are brought back to working reliably)

    @TazPoltorak @Bfordham the issue here is that even a basic sewing machine has quite a bit of mechanical complexity, and there is a limit to how cheap you can go during manufacture before you make it too prone to jamming and breaking

    on the higher end you can throw electronics at the issue to make stuff cheaper, for e.g. fancy stitches or fully automated buttonholes that used to require additional cams etc., but the mechanism to make a stitch and move the needle side to side just needs to be mechanical, and that bit requires precision.

  • @TazPoltorak @Bfordham the issue here is that even a basic sewing machine has quite a bit of mechanical complexity, and there is a limit to how cheap you can go during manufacture before you make it too prone to jamming and breaking

    on the higher end you can throw electronics at the issue to make stuff cheaper, for e.g. fancy stitches or fully automated buttonholes that used to require additional cams etc., but the mechanism to make a stitch and move the needle side to side just needs to be mechanical, and that bit requires precision.

    @TazPoltorak @Bfordham some toy machines cheat by only being able to make a chain stitch instead of the lockstitch used by modern¹ machines: those aren't really sewing machines, they can't be used to follow instructions designed for sewing machines and I'd recommend staying away from them even as a “starting” machine, because they really aren't one.

    the main issue being that the chain stitch unravels, and using it to make functional garments will require a lot more handsewing and different techniques that those used today.

    as the first sewing machine ever built, they were time saver when sewing meters and meters of ruffles on a 1850s dress, when you were used to sew 1840s dresses by hand, but really, sewing machine technology has moved on :)

    ¹ i.e. since the second half of the 19th century :D

  • oblomov@sociale.networkundefined oblomov@sociale.network shared this topic on

Gli ultimi otto messaggi ricevuti dalla Federazione
Post suggeriti
  • 0 Votes
    15 Posts
    0 Views
    @blag if you liked something, like it. If you think others might be interested in it, or should see it, boost it. If you have something to say, reply to it. This is my strategy.
  • 0 Votes
    1 Posts
    5 Views
    I'm looking at the architecture of things like Fedora Silverblue, NixOS, and the Steam Deck.The concept of an immutable root filesystem with atomic updates seems like the technically correct way to do an OS. No more dependency hell, no more breaking the system with a bad sudo command. But the muscle memory of apt-get install / dnf install is hard to break. Containerizing everything (flatpak/distrobox) feels like a friction point for quick tasks.For those who daily drive an immutable distro: Was the learning curve worth the stability? Or is it still too much friction for a machine? 🤔#askfedi #linux #fedora #steam #steamdeck #NixOS #foss #opensource #programming #sysadmin
  • 0 Votes
    1 Posts
    6 Views
    Android users: is your phone rooted?#AskFedi #FediPoll #Android
  • 0 Votes
    1 Posts
    6 Views
    Guest?
    EDIT - informationThis tutorial is supposed to be published by the tutorial profile of this server.It is designed to have several chapters, each being distinctively seperated by an own titel. In total as of now there are like besides this introduction like 6 chapters.posting and edition time of and by this EDIT profileof ver05 as of now 1hsmastodon review contact: @bitpickup--Categories:@helpers@forum.friendi.ca SPOILER - click to open/close || IntroductionThis tutorial is an adaption of the tutorial "creating a friendica server - ubuntu" by @hankg based on the experience of the installation report by @jesuisatirebitpickup:squeet.me/display/962c3e10-576…and specific help by @raroun.Server specs and friendica version used:VPS server | Ubuntu 22.04 LTSPHP Version 8.1.2-1ubuntu2.144 Core CPU, 8 GB Ram with 300GB NVME DiskFriendica [STABLE] | 'Giant Rhubarb' 2023.05 - 1518SPOILER - click to open/close || Installation environment and HowToThe only reasonable way to work with a VPSserver on the web is using the console.If you are not familiar with that don't worry, it is easy and the only thing you have to do is being able to copy/paste the commands displayed:¡Copy/paste only the codeBoxes like this one, located outside of the spoilers of this tutorial one after another without altering the sequence!Of course it is necessary to change the specific file names and passwords for you indiviual site, but that's all. promise!On the console you wont be able to copy/paste with the keyboard ctrl-C/ctrl-V technique, you'll have to use the mouse "right click, chose option" technique.This tutorial was created on a #debian #linux desktop environment.There shouldn't be differences if you want to do this from a #windows machine.The method used for communication between your local computer and the VPS server is called #SSH:Wikipedia - Secure Shell:"Cryptographic network protocol for secure data communication, remote shell services or command execution and other secure network services between two networked computers."#linux #debian #ubuntu #friendica #fediVerse #fediTutorial #tutorial #fediHelp #fediTips #activityPub #HowTo #DIY #VPS #server #selfHosting@admin@tupambae.org @tutorial@tupambae.org