Weighted Thread Holder
#31
Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2013
Location: South of Chicago, IL
Posts: 322
This is the same one that I bought; mine came from Joann's Fabrics. Don't know if they still carry them. You can sometime find them on eBay.
check out LongCreek Mills. They have a weighted stand for $8 and they only charge what the shipping actually costs.
http://www.longcreekmills.com/product/stand.html
http://www.longcreekmills.com/product/stand.html
#33
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2013
Location: Bartlesville, OK USA
Posts: 336
I purchased this one from Connecting Threads. It's not as pretty as the flower one, but it works fine. http://www.connectingthreads.com/too...d__D81905.html
#36
I have one of the older metal ones, and thought I was getting another one, but it was plastic. Go to the hardware store and get some of the large round washers. The largest ones are pretty heavy and several of them glued together and then glued to the base work fine for me. I have also made my own thread quides with the washers and a knitting needle bent into the same shape as the thread holder rod. I used silicone caulk to glue the knitting needle to the base I constructed from several washers. I guess I am pretty cheap, but it is fun to make my own 'jigs'. Phyllis
#37
This one is very similar to the Superior threads version: http://www.sewingpartsonline.com/thr...27449-uth.aspx
It's a nice heavy stand and it's thin enough I can set it to the right of my featherweight on a featherweight table.
I don't have any affiliation with SPO, I just found the stand in a search.
If you want the stack wound thread feature that the superior stand has, you can drill out of the the spots covered by the rubber grommets on the long piece. That's what I did.
It's a nice heavy stand and it's thin enough I can set it to the right of my featherweight on a featherweight table.
I don't have any affiliation with SPO, I just found the stand in a search.
If you want the stack wound thread feature that the superior stand has, you can drill out of the the spots covered by the rubber grommets on the long piece. That's what I did.
#39
Member
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: near Indianapolis, IN
Posts: 10
I currently use a heavy wooden paper towel holder that my husband adapted with a long bolt for the cone of thread and an eye screw to feed the thread at the top. But before this, I used a holder that blank cds/dvds came in to hold the thread cone and a binder clip clipped to a nearby shelf to feed the thread through--it worked perfectly fine!
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