I use only Gutermann. Coats and Clark snarls in *all* of my sewing
machines (I've got several - a couple with horizontal spool feeds and
one with a vertical spool feed). I've used Metrosene without incident. 

My machines are both foreign and domestic and are antique as well as new.

kate

----- Original Message -----
From: Sharon Collier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Monday, July 30, 2007 4:14 pm
Subject: RE: [h-cost] Heat n Bond Hell
To: 'Historical Costume' <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

> I just bought a new machine and the salesman said Gutermann thread is
> horrible and recommended against using it in my new machine. He 
> recommendedsome thread (I don't remember the name, started with a 
> "M"). Of course, I
> have 50 colors of Gutermann.
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:h-costume-
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] On
> Behalf Of Kathy Page
> Sent: Saturday, July 28, 2007 12:37 PM
> To: Historical Costume List
> Subject: [h-cost] Heat n Bond Hell
> 
> NOW I remember why I hate that stuff. I just had the weirdest thing 
> happenwhile using it.
> 
> I am appliqueing  a cotton/linen blend midweight fabric and used 
> the ultra
> bond, the thread is Gutermann cotton thread. The first two 
> appliques went
> fine- a total dream; I was using plain cone thread for that. I 
> switch to the
> Gutermann, and all hell breaks loose. The satin stitch starts skipping
> stitches and the needle is gummed up with sticky goop. I have to 
> clean off
> my needle roughly once an inch. Nothing had changed from one pair 
> to the
> other, except the thread and the weather. I was ripping my hair out 
> tryingto figure out what the problem was. The best we could come up 
> with was the
> slight rise in humidity with the new weather front has caused the 
> heat n
> bond to soften. I even tried to dry it with a hot iron, but that 
> didn'twork, either.
> 
> Anyone else have this happen, and is there anything I can do to 
> make it
> stop??
> 
> Kathy
> 
> Ermine, a lion rampant tail nowed gules charged on the shoulder 
> with a rose
> Or barbed, seeded, slipped and leaved vert
> (Fieldless) On a rose Or barbed vert a lions head erased gules. 
> It?s never too late to be who you might have been.
> -George Eliot
> Tosach eólais imchomarc. - Questioning is the beginning of 
> knowledge. 
> Who you are is contained inside, and no one can change that. They 
> can only
> assist you in denying who you are, but not indelibly reshape you to 
> theirown image.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
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