Working of a sewing machine

Surajkulriya
2 min readFeb 28, 2021

I spent a long time thinking about how best to illustrate the inner mechanisms of a sewing machine and looking at quite a few artworks other people have struggled to draw. So many moving parts are packed into such a small space that it can be difficult to figure out which bit is doing what. The more accurate the drawing, often the harder it is to understand, and I think it’s actually clearer to look at the key mechanisms separately.

A handmade stitch is made by passing a needle all the way through the fabric, pulling a single thread in its wake. The needle is the key element.

But with a sewing machine, the needle’s only purpose is to prick the fabric to push one thread through, so it can make a knot with a second thread before being pulled back up. The knot has become the core.

Here’s a slow motion gif animation of how a sewing machine works:

  1. The needle tied to the spool thread (or upper thread) pierces both the fabric and the needle plate below it.
  2. Unlike handheld needles, the eye (= hole) of sewing machine needles is on the pointy end which allows it to push the thread through the fabric without going through itself.
  3. The needle then rises a little so that the thread, pushed against the underside of the needle plate, folds into a loop.
  4. The loop is caught by a rotating hook (the bobbin case) which widens it and makes it circle the case and the small bobbin within. This bobbin supplies the second thread (also called lower thread).
  5. When the hook’s rotation is complete, the lower thread is caught in the upper thread’s loop and together they make a knot.
  6. Finally, the needle pulls the upper thread back up, tightening the knot against the fabric. The stitch is done and the cycle can start again.

References:

  1. How does sewing machine work.
  2. How do sewing machines work.

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