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Embroidery => General Embroidery => Topic started by: inkman996 on December 14, 2020, 01:13:38 PM

Title: Tip for new embroiderers
Post by: inkman996 on December 14, 2020, 01:13:38 PM
Maybe good for older ones as well.

Something I have noticed over the years when people struggle with a design or their machine they never ever think of the thread itself and its age. Who would think thread has a shelf life? Well it does. Running a large order this weekend using a very off shade brown, who knows when we originally bought it and for what but it was a color we needed and sure enough when the sample we were running got to that brown we could not get 100 stitches with it shredding. First I ruled out the head by using a different head, then I checked the digitizing and nothing was off. So I used a different color suspecting the thread was old and it ran perfectly.

So when you are banging your head against a wall thinking your machine has a problem, or the digitizing is bad maybe its your thread. One way you can tell an older poly thread is by how well it holds a memory, if you can curl it up like a wire its old.

I would also recommend never buying old stock from someone, usually they are selling it because they have had it for ever or its a company that went out of business and you have no way of knowing hold old their stock is.
Title: Re: Tip for new embroiderers
Post by: BP on December 14, 2020, 01:49:13 PM
Yes and Yes. Also you really need climate controlled storage for your thread.
Title: Re: Tip for new embroiderers
Post by: mk162 on December 14, 2020, 01:52:29 PM
Yes and Yes. Also you really need climate controlled storage for your thread.

Your entire embroidery department should be climate controlled.
Title: Re: Tip for new embroiderers
Post by: inkman996 on December 14, 2020, 02:21:44 PM
Ours is but time still has an effect.