Libmonster ID: U.S.-3694

Sewing Machine Day

June 13th. A date that means nothing to most people. But for tailors, seamstresses, designers, and housewives, it's a small celebration. Sewing Machine Day. Unofficial, but well-deserved. On this day in 1790, the Englishman Thomas Saint received a patent for the first sewing machine. Of course, that machine was bulky and only made straight stitches, but it laid the groundwork for the revolution in sewing. Today, we can't imagine life without the sewing machine. It mends jeans, sews curtains, creates fashion collections. In its honor, this text.

Prehistory: Sewing Before the Machine

Before the invention of the sewing machine, people sewed by hand. Bone and metal needles. Threads made of fibers. Stitch by stitch. Tailors spent days making one shirt. In the 18th century, the first mechanisms that mimicked the movements of the hand appeared. But they were imperfect. Thomas Saint's patent described a machine with a needle having a loop at the tip (like the modern one). But his invention did not gain widespread distribution. The breakthrough came in the 19th century.

First Commercial Success: Singer

In 1850, the American Isaac Singer improved the design of the sewing machine: added a bobbin, foot pedal. In 1851, he patented the machine and founded the Singer company. This was a turning point. Singer machines were sold worldwide, including in Russia. They were expensive, but they paid for themselves due to speed. By the end of the 19th century, the sewing machine had ceased to be a luxury, becoming a necessity for every housewife.

How a Sewing Machine Works

Basic elements: needle (pierces the fabric), bobbin (forms a loop through which the thread passes), fabric feed mechanism (transporter), thread tensioner, spool cap. A modern machine also has reverse (backstitching), stitch length regulator, feet for different operations. The electric motor replaced the foot pedal. In 2026, "smart" machines with Wi-Fi, downloading embroidery patterns, appeared.

The Sewing Machine in Culture

The sewing machine is a symbol of home comfort, women's labor. In literature: Chekhov has a story "Sewing Machine." In painting: the painting "Woman at a Sewing Machine" by Edward Hopper. In cinema: "Sewing Machine" (1960s). In music: the song "Singer" by the band "The White Stripes." In folklore: riddles ("The thinnest, head with a pound").

How to Celebrate Sewing Machine Day

Take out your machine, oil it (if it's manual), wipe off the dust. Sew something: a pillowcase, a potholder, repair old jeans. If you don't have a machine, buy a simple used one. Watch videos about how industrial machines work. Give sewing thread or needles to a friend who loves crafting. Write a post on social media with the hashtag #SewingMachineDay.

Interesting Facts

The largest sewing machine in the world is located in the Singer Museum in the USA (height 3 meters). The smallest is in Japan (length 1 cm, powered by a battery). In space, sewing machines are not used (there's nothing to sew), but there are repair kits with a needle on the ISS. In the USSR, the "Podolsk" sewing machine was in every home. Now vintage "Singers" are collected.

Sewing Machine Day is a day of respect for work, patience, the art of creating things with your own hands. If you have a machine, thank it. If not, think about getting one. Because it can not only sew but also soothe nerves. The rhythmic sound is soothing.


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Machine Day // New-York: Libmonster (LIBMONSTER.COM). Updated: 15.06.2026. URL: https://libmonster.com/m/articles/view/Machine-Day (date of access: 05.07.2026).

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