Here's my opinion on quilting machines: I think that throat space, fabric and thread handling are key benefits--and figure out what is important to you. Having tons of decorative stitches and other accouterments means that you are paying up for features that have limited use for quilting. As with most things, you have to balance features + benefits against budget. So if you have a machine with small throat space but tons of features, you have a great machine that you can use on other projects--you just don't have to shove a quilt through a limited space. I was in that position where quilting was a pain because my updated Bernina (updated from my 7 stitch 910 from the 90s) B530 had only 7.5" of throat space. I believed, wrongly, that I could quilt with that as there were so many videos on how to quilt on your domestic. Yes you can, but your level of frustration is inversely proportioned to the amount of throat space. After a painful quilt finish on a larger quilt, I determined to find a machine I could quilt on, and I was not interested in investing in the learning curve, dollars, space for a long arm. I bought a Juki Kirei (like new used at significant discount) because it had 12" of throat space. It has tons of features/stitches, but the throat space means that I can comfortably FMQ or straight stitch. It has a thread cutter, foot hover, beginning/ending patterns, two stitch plates (straight/regular), and SmartFeed (dual feed) system. These are the features that I would not part with (an not on my Bernina), and I offer them for others to consider. (The Juki Miyabi --sit down long arm which can convert to a frame was a contender.) For those on a budget, you might want to consider closeout machines or find like-new, used machines. You can get great deals on used machines owned by people who fail to read the manual and understand adjustments and throw their hands up and blame it on the machine.
I totally agree with you. I am looking for a machine with a wide throat for quilting. I have no need for 400+ stitches. What good are they for quilting? Manufactures add all these extra stitches that the majority will never use, then charge for these extras. It's like buying a microwave with all the bells and whistles when all you want to do is heat milk or melt butter. I've looked at several makes, the higher the model and price, the more extensive the amount of different stitches. All I really need is a basic machine with a wide throat. So thank you for your suggestions of the Juki. I will now research this brand. The clear and easy presentation was so useful, so thank you and the best online to date.
I have 3 Berninas, well worth the price. My Quilting bee friends have various other brands and they deal with a lot of frustration. I have so much trust in my Berninas that when something goes wrong I know it’s something I have done wrong, not my Bernina. I have the 830 Record (1976) and it just hums along making a lovely perfect stitch every time. I’ll never switch to a different brand,
I've had my Janome Memorycraft for a few years now, and just love it. Thank you for sharing this tutorial, I've learned a few more things about my machine!
Absolutely love my Bernina 880 Plus, she is one smart girl💕💕 Dual feed is definitely a game changer as with so many of her other features. Embroidery on the 880 is a dream.
Thank you for sharing this Info. I have the Phaff performance Icon and it sure is a joy for me. However, would like to see the new Juki that is out. The Janome machine seems like a great machine. Threading for me is very important. !!
I just bought a Bernina 735….I am hoping I can learn to quilt and embroidery on it! I couldn’t afford the 770, but I’m keeping my fingers crossed that this machine is going to be fantastic!🤞🏼
Would you give us your feedback about the 735? Do you regret buying it? Would rather get a bigger one? There is nothing about the 735 that could help one decide
@@doredys To be honest , it does ALMost everything I want it to do. It does drink oil, which is sooo frustrating! I can’t even bind a quilt without needing to stop and oil the machine. But the technician says that can happen on any series….just the make up of the machine itself. Not all 735s drink oil! As far as embroidery, there are a few things that bother me that it doesn’t do that the 780 does. Like curve lettering. When I took the embroidery class everyone in the class had a bigger machine than I did and they were all bending that lettering around the center of the project….the teacher said “of course your machine does it!” But after a bit of frustration she went to the technician and he said “the 735 doesn’t have the ability to do that unless someone does it on their machine and you take the thumb drive and put it in the 735! But other than a few things like that….its been great. The price was awesome and that few thousand dollars less made me feel like I could afford the Bernina.
Hi Mary, at the time of this comment we are selling the Bernina 770 QE Plus at £4250*. See the machine here: www.thesewingstudio.co.uk/bernina-770qe-plus-sewing-machine.ir *Prices may fluctuate and sadly we only ship within the UK at the moment.
Thank you so much for this wonderful tutorial. You're very easy to listen to, and knowledgeable. I was almost sold on the Jukie. After seeing and hearing the Janome, I'm really torn between the Bernina. The brother, that allows you to sew without a foot pedal, as in for someone who may not have the use of their legs? That is genius. I've had my heart set on the Bernina B735, mainly for the difference in price from the B770 QE, and I have no use or desire for an embroidery module. Hand work is so relaxing. The Bernina really is quite noisy.
I think the main issue for Bernina is their prices considering what other manufacturers give you they give you so much less and you have to pay outrageous prices for accessories. I wanted to buy a Bernina but the daily oiling was not something I wanted to do and pay thousands of dollars for it. Plus its hard to find someone to fix them.
Any sewing machine can piece, and many can quilt as you go, or with a small sandwich. If the title is for quilting machines, Please show a real quilt in the machine. How does it work when rolled up under the throat? That is the real test.
Surely there is a higher functioning machine between the second and third ranking machines. The selected Brother model seems to be too basic compared to the Janome.(My Brothe rmachine is fantastic). Do you not have PFAFF available in the UK?
Hi Mickey. Our 1st Place Quilting machine is sold at £4,250 - but we always offer a 'less expensive' alternative throughout our reviews (see 3rd place machine, at £399).
Here's my opinion on quilting machines: I think that throat space, fabric and thread handling are key benefits--and figure out what is important to you. Having tons of decorative stitches and other accouterments means that you are paying up for features that have limited use for quilting. As with most things, you have to balance features + benefits against budget. So if you have a machine with small throat space but tons of features, you have a great machine that you can use on other projects--you just don't have to shove a quilt through a limited space. I was in that position where quilting was a pain because my updated Bernina (updated from my 7 stitch 910 from the 90s) B530 had only 7.5" of throat space. I believed, wrongly, that I could quilt with that as there were so many videos on how to quilt on your domestic. Yes you can, but your level of frustration is inversely proportioned to the amount of throat space.
After a painful quilt finish on a larger quilt, I determined to find a machine I could quilt on, and I was not interested in investing in the learning curve, dollars, space for a long arm. I bought a Juki Kirei (like new used at significant discount) because it had 12" of throat space. It has tons of features/stitches, but the throat space means that I can comfortably FMQ or straight stitch. It has a thread cutter, foot hover, beginning/ending patterns, two stitch plates (straight/regular), and SmartFeed (dual feed) system. These are the features that I would not part with (an not on my Bernina), and I offer them for others to consider. (The Juki Miyabi --sit down long arm which can convert to a frame was a contender.)
For those on a budget, you might want to consider closeout machines or find like-new, used machines. You can get great deals on used machines owned by people who fail to read the manual and understand adjustments and throw their hands up and blame it on the machine.
Very helpful information! Thanks for sharing.
@@Esperanzacarr76 thank you
I totally agree with you. I am looking for a machine with a wide throat for quilting. I have no need for 400+ stitches. What good are they for quilting? Manufactures add all these extra stitches that the majority will never use, then charge for these extras. It's like buying a microwave with all the bells and whistles when all you want to do is heat milk or melt butter.
I've looked at several makes, the higher the model and price, the more extensive the amount of different stitches. All I really need is a basic machine with a wide throat. So thank you for your suggestions of the Juki. I will now research this brand.
The clear and easy presentation was so useful, so thank you and the best online to date.
I have 3 Berninas, well worth the price. My Quilting bee friends have various other brands and they deal with a lot of frustration. I have so much trust in my Berninas that when something goes wrong I know it’s something I have done wrong, not my Bernina. I have the 830 Record (1976) and it just hums along making a lovely perfect stitch every time. I’ll never switch to a different brand,
Love my Bernina 770. I have found it far superior to my other higher end machines from other manufacturers. It’s well worth the $$ 😊
I've had my Janome Memorycraft for a few years now, and just love it. Thank you for sharing this tutorial, I've learned a few more things about my machine!
Absolutely love my Bernina 880 Plus, she is one smart girl💕💕 Dual feed is definitely a game changer as with so many of her other features. Embroidery on the 880 is a dream.
I went from 770 to 880+ and I totally agree with you 😊
I love my 6700p! And I want to add that a few things that where mentioned with the Bernina and not with the 6700p DO apply for the 6700p too
Thank you for sharing this Info. I have the Phaff performance Icon and it sure is a joy for me. However, would like to see the new Juki that is out. The Janome machine seems like a great machine. Threading for me is very important. !!
I just bought a Bernina 735….I am hoping I can learn to quilt and embroidery on it! I couldn’t afford the 770, but I’m keeping my fingers crossed that this machine is going to be fantastic!🤞🏼
You can do it! Happy Sewing :)
Would you give us your feedback about the 735? Do you regret buying it? Would rather get a bigger one? There is nothing about the 735 that could help one decide
@@doredys To be honest , it does ALMost everything I want it to do. It does drink oil, which is sooo frustrating! I can’t even bind a quilt without needing to stop and oil the machine. But the technician says that can happen on any series….just the make up of the machine itself. Not all 735s drink oil! As far as embroidery, there are a few things that bother me that it doesn’t do that the 780 does. Like curve lettering. When I took the embroidery class everyone in the class had a bigger machine than I did and they were all bending that lettering around the center of the project….the teacher said “of course your machine does it!” But after a bit of frustration she went to the technician and he said “the 735 doesn’t have the ability to do that unless someone does it on their machine and you take the thumb drive and put it in the 735! But other than a few things like that….its been great. The price was awesome and that few thousand dollars less made me feel like I could afford the Bernina.
@@Str8eeth thank you so much for taking to answer. Very helpful. I just found a B770 almost for the same price as the B735, Ill check this one also
The Bernina 770plus costs almost $8,000 with tax. It had better be good.
$8 k!?! Omg.
I bought a pre-owned one from a dealer for less than half that amount and it’s truly amazing. I love my Bernina.
Hi Mary, at the time of this comment we are selling the Bernina 770 QE Plus at £4250*.
See the machine here: www.thesewingstudio.co.uk/bernina-770qe-plus-sewing-machine.ir
*Prices may fluctuate and sadly we only ship within the UK at the moment.
The Bernina 770QE is comparable to the Brother Stellaire. I wonder at the selection.
I have an 7 year old 770QE - best purchase I ever made. A beautiful machine.
You so much! The Bernina scares me to death, but I might be able to handle the Janome or the brother. Thank you.
Truth. I'm intimidated by any machine that's in the same weight class that I am....dreadnought.
Thank you so much for this wonderful tutorial. You're very easy to listen to, and knowledgeable. I was almost sold on the Jukie.
After seeing and hearing the Janome, I'm really torn between the Bernina.
The brother, that allows you to sew without a foot pedal, as in for someone who may not have the use of their legs? That is genius.
I've had my heart set on the Bernina B735, mainly for the difference in price from the B770 QE, and I have no use or desire for an embroidery module. Hand work is so relaxing. The Bernina really is quite noisy.
Bernina made to last - i only use Bernina
this is such a helpful video! Wow thank you. I'm just getting into quilting and I'm so happy that I found this video. Just subscribed too. ❤🥰
Thank you for the great words and for subscribing!
Hi... Your video was very informative. Thank you for that. I have a question... What is the maximum thickness for quilting on these machines?
I think the main issue for Bernina is their prices considering what other manufacturers give you they give you so much less and you have to pay outrageous prices for accessories. I wanted to buy a Bernina but the daily oiling was not something I wanted to do and pay thousands of dollars for it. Plus its hard to find someone to fix them.
I prefer a long arm. More room for larger quilts. But for free motion smaller pieces these might be nice.
good job! very informative. id like to know the prices of all the machines. only saw the price on the first machine. thank you!
Hi Denise, if you follow the links in the description you should be able to access the current prices :)
Can you show the stitches up close to see the quality next time
It would be nice to have prices on these machines
Hi Mickey - the link to the blog where we speak more about these machines is in the description!
Where are your Baby Lock options?
Any sewing machine can piece, and many can quilt as you go, or with a small sandwich. If the title is for quilting machines, Please show a real quilt in the machine. How does it work when rolled up under the throat? That is the real test.
Well said
Surely there is a higher functioning machine between the second and third ranking machines. The selected Brother model seems to be too basic compared to the Janome.(My Brothe rmachine is fantastic). Do you not have PFAFF available in the UK?
Can you use that quilting kit on any brother sewing machine
Hi Zoey - The quilt kit fits any A-Series Brother Machines, so this is this A16, A50, A60, A80 & A150.
Now for the Janome….I wish I could afford that one! HOW MUCH?
How much is the Janome?
This is $3k at my local sewing machine store. I paid $2600 almost 3 years ago and glad I purchased it
How can i get technician😊
Price please
why aren't you comparing machines with the same "throat" size?
Have you considered Babylock. Mine is amazing for quilting.
Hi Victoria, We have just launched our next 'Best Machine' video referring to mini machines.
ruclips.net/video/Ompaw034aJA/видео.html
Quilters love Juki machines. They beat these 3 into the ground.
If you are pushing 8K machines….please …..not all of us can afford that!
Hi Mickey. Our 1st Place Quilting machine is sold at £4,250 - but we always offer a 'less expensive' alternative throughout our reviews (see 3rd place machine, at £399).
Babylock. Babylock. Babylock.
There is no throat room on the Brother, not that great for quilting large pieces.
She is constantly shaking her head in a no fashion!
Why are you using BLACK fabric? How can we see what the stitches are like? Bad demonstration.