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Singer Corporation is an American manufacturer of consumer sewing machines, first established as I. M. Singer & Co. in 1851 by Isaac M. Singer with New York lawyer Edward C. Clark. Best known for its sewing machines, it was renamed Singer Manufacturing Company in 1865, then the Singer Company in 1963. It is based in La Vergne, Tennessee, near Nashville. Its first large factory for mass production was built in 1863 in Elizabeth, New Jersey.
Singer's original design was the first practical sewing machine for general domestic use. It incorporated the basic eye-pointed needle and lock stitch, developed by Elias Howe, who won a patent-infringement suit against Singer in 1854.
Singer's patent model for his sewing machine
Singer obtained patent no. 8294 in August 1851 for an improved sewing machine that included a circular feed wheel, thread controller, and power transmitted by gear wheels and shafting.
Singer consolidated enough patents in the field to enable him to engage in mass production, and by 1860 his company was the largest manufacturer of sewing machines in the world. In 1885 Singer produced its first "vibrating shuttle" sewing machine, an improvement over contemporary transverse shuttle designs (see bobbin drivers). The Singer company began to market its machines internationally in 1855 and won first prize at the Paris world's fair that year. The company demonstrated the first workable electric sewing machine in 1910. Singer was also a marketing innovator and a pioneer in promoting the use of installment payment plans.
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... für mich als Schneiderin eine besondere Pflanze !! 😊
... a special plant for me as a dressmaker !! 😊
#macromondays
#Vintage
#sharpnessisnoteverything
Extra! Extra! Read all about it, the vintage watch in a miracle cure...
I had two possible subjects for "Vintage", a brass thread counting glass that my mom (magrit k.) got during her dressmaker apprenticeship, and an automatic wristwatch that had belonged to my father. The plan was to combine these two items. I placed the thread counter's magnifying glass over the date, and while I was checking out different positions of thread counter, watch, and camera, all of a sudden the seconds hand appeared on my camera's display. Now you might think that this is nothing special, the seconds hand of a watch does move, doesn't it? Well, this one didn't. For the past 15 or so years, it didn't move an inch. I've been wearing this watch nonstop for many years after my father died, and I had it repaired several times, but at one point it stopped working, and the watchmaker told me that the movement was finally beyond repair. And now the seconds hand started moving out of nowhere. You can tell that I was surprised. Even shocked a little when the watch started working again all of a sudden. Immediately, The Who's song "Miracle Cure" from Tommy popped up in my head, hence the title ;) So what I will do next is carry the watch to a watchmaker and have it cleaned and checked. I still can't believe it ;)
Technically, this is one single shot. I had focused on the dial, through the thread counter's magnifying glass, which explains the distortion of the dial. The main focus is, of course, on the magnificent seconds hand ;) The frame around the dial is the brass thread counter; the manufacturer was "Hostmann-Steinberg" which is the blurred lettering that you can see. Processed in DXO PL6, Lightroom, and a variety of Nik Collection filters.
Happy Macro Monday, Everyone!
... here it is what happens when I'm inattentive... very often... hahaha... so.... this is inattentive MEP's Art dressmaker...
but gravity helped me... hahah...
and everything fell on the floor...
what a mess.... but funny.. isn't it?.... :-)
P = m x g
is the formula of gravity
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“It is an illusion that photos are made with the camera…
they are made with the eye, heart and head.”
[Henry Cartier Bresson]
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Please don't use any of my images on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit written permission.
© All rights reserved
.... is a dressmaker specializing in alterations. ~Faith Baldwin
Have a great start into the weekenen,dear flickr-friends!
Please don't use this image without my explicit written permission. © All rights reserved
Agra (Inde) - Photo prise dans la même rue que la précédente. Une rue où les artisans tailleurs et couturiers travaillent devant leur maison.
Contrairement à ce que l'on pourrait croire, cet homme n'est pas dans un atelier 'intérieur. Comme le l'écrivais en substance plus haut, il est sur le trottoir. C'est probablement la couleur et une étrange lumière diffuse qui donnent cette ambiance particulière. Les goûts, c'est comme les couleurs, ça ne se discute pas.
Agra (India) - Photo taken in the same street as the previous one. A street where tailors and dressmakers work in front of their homes.
Contrary to what one might think, this man is not in an indoor workshop. As I wrote in substance above, he is on the sidewalk. It is probably the color associated with a strange light that gives this particular atmosphere.
memories of those tiny sharp piercing pins....
Pix'd @ maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Pine%20Lake/195/78/32
Tralalas Diner @ Pine Lake - Post-apocalyptic living
Stuff:
7 - Hanging Bulb -Triple
RO - Spook Show - Fancy Nancy Mannequin
[MF] Old rusty broken mannequin 1
{vespertine} Empty Beauty / 9 RARE
RO - Dress Form - No Materials
junk. half man(nequin).
Distressed Mannequin Torso - Urban Spirit
[ht:home] dressmaker's mannequin - vintage
[ht:home] dressmaker's mannequin - vintage covered
..::THOR::..Old's Cool "L" table RARE
{vespertine} -shelves for store.
{vespertine} -long shelf
::no13:: 14accounts book
=Z=Kiosk Birdcage (Khaki)
*bbqq*-In Autumn Building
I already have Candy Apple Hello Kitty; Little Red Riding Hood; Aria pink dress; Kate Spade fashion; 1940s Barbie red suit jacket/skirt with fur stole; Silkstone Waitress; High Stepping; Morning Frost Robe; Pierre Thrill Seeker jacket; Peppy Preppy; pink Dressmaker Details suit/skirt; Pale Fire Jewelry; Darius and Dressmaker Details Today Boucle, so I'm no longer looking to buy them.
This is a quote by Harlan Miller.
Christmas Market at Gendarmenmarkt, Berlin Mitte
Centrally located at one of the most beautiful squares in Berlin, this Christmas Market offers quality Christmas decoration, food and entertainment.
Not only thanks to its location between Französischer Dom and Deutscher Dom is the Christmas market at Gendarmenmarkt one of the most atmospheric in the city. The market offers a large range of handmade goods crafted by artisans, Christmas foods, and entertainment.
In the market's large crafts tent, visitors can look wood carvers, belt makers, dressmakers, comb makers and other craftspeople over the shoulder. Not far away, talented graphic artists, photographers, stonemasons and painters display their works.
Culinary offerings at the Gendarmenmarkt Christmas market range from unusual snacks to gourmet menus and traditional Christmas delicacies. Jugglers, fire-eaters, choirs and classical, jazz or Gospel ensembles provide a varied entertainment programme on each market day. A part of the proceeds of the admission fee is given to charity.
This shot was taken with a Sony Alpha 6000 Camera and a Samyang 12 mm ultra-wide lens in December 2016. The picture of the moon was taken with a Canon SX-50 a few days before and inserted. In the original shot, the moon is not quite that big.
Thank you for taking the time to look. Hope you enjoy and potentially learn something! Big thanks to the amazing Flickr family out there!
This is my trusty magnetic rod that I use for picking up dropped dressmaker pins. Its diameter is similar to a slim pen and about half the length. I've had it since my fashion industry days in the late 1960's. These days I'm not doing a lot of sewing, so it sits in a little metal machine accessories tin along with a couple of tiny screwdrivers, a little brush for fluffing dust from the sewing machine needle area, and a pair of tweezers that I used to use when threading my old over-locker. The little magnet still works well and gets used on the odd occasion - and creating this photo certainly was a most odd occasion for its use.
Thank you for your visit, comment or fave. All are much appreciated. Thank you also to all who invite my photos to their groups.
All rights reserved. This photo is not authorized for use on your blogs, pin boards, websites or use in any other way.
All photos and textures used are my own.
Dewhurst's have a wonderful range of bright colours in their range of sewing cottons like this reel of very vibrant pink, which has been blessed with the delightful name of "Frivolous Pink".
When it was last my birthday, a very dear friend who enjoys photography as much as I do, and knows that I collect beautiful and vintage pieces, gave me a wonderful selection of antique ribbons, buttons, buckles, lace and other fine notions. She also gave me three follow up tins of similar delightful gifts for Christmas.
Those wonderful gifts are what has inspired me to create this series of "Embroider my World" images featuring my vintage bobbin collection. I happened to be at a garage sale of a former milliner and dressmaker last Sunday and came across this beautiful piece of oriental brocade. It seemed appropriate to use it as a backdrop to my Dewhurst's Sylko "Frivolous Pink" reel of cotton from my collection because it matched it so perfectly! The bobbin of Frivolous Pink dates from between 1938 and 1954.
Belle Vue Mill, commonly known as Dewhurst’s, was built by Thomas Dewhurst in 1828. It opened in 1829 as John Dewhurst & Sons and was one of Skipton’s largest spinning and weaving mills. The mill’s position next to the Leeds Liverpool Canal meant that raw cotton could be shipped in by boats from Liverpool. Finished goods would then be sent back the same way ready for distribution. Coal to power the machine’s steam engines was also delivered by barge. In 1897 Dewhurst’s was bought by the English Sewing Cotton Co. It continued to produce Sylko, one of the mill’s most famous products. It was produced in over 500 colours and sold throughout the world. Sylko cottons are still available at haberdashers today
Project 365, 2022 Edition: Day 63/365
100s, 2022 Edition: 32/100
From the parlour palm, Chamaedorea elegans, in my office window. They're only the size of the heads of dressmaker's pins, but any sign of creativity from the houseplants is welcome especially in late winter. I've never seen these before.
Thank you to everyone who visits, faves, and comments.
Inspired by a song.
A house shaped dressmakers pin tin 2.5" wide x 2.25" high
Added to: Macro Mondays
This lady makes beautiful dresses and curtains in the market in Urdaneta using a treadle operated Singer sewing machine
In Glasgow, Scotland, there is a charming & fascinating little museum called Tenement House that allows you to enter a time warp that allows you to experience life in a four room flat in the early 20th century. Home to a shorthand typist, Miss Agnes Toward and her dressmaker mother, it is perfectly preserved. Viewing the table set for tea, I felt like I was journeying back in time before an ignorant buffoon like Donald Trump could ever have been called our president. I long for the end of this nightmare that has descended on my country and pray for our national deliverance before too much damage is done.
My generation of radicals and breakers-down never found anything to take the place of the old virtues of work and courage and the old graces of courtesy and politeness."
~ F. Scott Fitzgerald
"When once the forms of civility are violated, there remains little hope of return to kindness or decency." ~ Samuel Johnson
"I cannot imagine a truly beautiful world without courtesy being integral to its culture."
~ Hrishikesh Agnihotri
I found this photo of my mother´s parents. The second from the left is my grandfather and third from the left my grandmother. The elegant lady in the background with the very fancy hat is my mother´s aunt. I remember that my mother really admired her. She was a splendid dressmaker with her own business with employés. Not so very common for a single lady those days. I think the photo is from about 1900-1905.
Billbergia 'Queen's Tears' (Billbergia nutans)
For my 100 Flowers Project - 2024
Rick's (next door) Queen's Tears Bromeliad is looking lovely.
A quick post and run as I need to get Louise to the airport soon for her flight back to Sydney. She was down over the weekend to see the dressmaker who is preparing her wedding dress.
“Couples stood aside and stared at Tilly, draped in a striking green gown that was sculpted, crafted about her svelte frame. It curved with her hips, stretched over her breasts and clung to her thighs. And the material—georgette, two-and-six a yard from the sale stand at Pratts. The girls in their short frocks with pinched waists, their hair stiff in neat circles, opened their pink lips wide and tugged self-consciously at their frothy skirts.” – The Dressmaker (1996) written by Rosalie Ham.
The theme for “Smile on Saturday” for the 2nd of November is "needles or spines". Being a collector of vintage and antique haberdashery pieces, I have opted for the needles for this week's challenge. These needles, all of which are plated in gold, come from a deluxe antique needle case from the 1930s made of the most beautiful marone leather with hand tooled gold lettering identifying which types of needles they are. To show you just how small they are, I have photographed them against a sterling silver beehive thimble made by James Fenton & Company in 1904, and a spool of Rose brand buttonhole silk twist in a lovely shade of moss green. I decided to give the image a more vintage look by stripping out a bit of colour and adding a slight sepia tone. I hope you like my choice for this week's theme, and that it makes you smile!
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“It is an illusion that photos are made with the camera…
they are made with the eye, heart and head.”
[Henry Cartier Bresson]
*******************************************************************************
Please don't use any of my images on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit written permission.
© All rights reserved
During the Great Depression my mother’s parents did everything they could think of to keep their family fed and sheltered. Among other things Grandma became a dressmaker in their home and Grandpa made jewelry. My mother passed these earrings along to me before she died.
For the “Earrings” theme at Smile On Saturday.
And for the "Earrings" challenge at "Weekly Theme Challenge"
Created for the Award Tree Challenge
~ ROTHKO-ESQUE January 2024 Challenge ~
www.flickr.com/groups/awardtree/discuss/72157721920021985/
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“It is an illusion that photos are made with the camera…
they are made with the eye, heart and head.”
[Henry Cartier Bresson]
*************************************************************************************
Please don't use any of my images on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit written permission.
© All rights reserved
© Cosmopolitan Photography | All rights reserved.
Do not use, copy or edit any of my images without my written permission.
Excerpt from www.cambridge.ca/en/learn-about/resources/Old-Galt-Histor...:
Imperial Block (circa 1887) at 14-32 Water Street South: The Imperial Block is a Romanesque Revival style building erected on land that Absalom Shade used for his garden. The original occupants of the block were the Commercial bank, a grocery store, a tailoring store, a hairdresser, a tobacco dealer, a dentist, a dressmaker and a musical instrument store.