sydknee Posted March 17 Report Posted March 17 I have a chance to buy this and I’m wondering if it could (should) be adapted as a scroll saw table. Stability might be a problem. Ruining a antique could be a bigger problem. OCtoolguy 1 Quote
Scrappile Posted March 17 Report Posted March 17 Well, it would be one of the most beautiful scroll saw tables I have ever seen! OCtoolguy and Dan 2 Quote
jerry walters Posted March 17 Report Posted March 17 If I were you Syd, I would keep if it is yours and not destroy it using it for a stand for your scroll saw. Just my opinion. Is the sewing machine still in it? Jerry OCtoolguy 1 Quote
sydknee Posted March 17 Author Report Posted March 17 20 minutes ago, jerry walters said: If I were you Syd, I would keep if it is yours and not destroy it using it for a stand for your scroll saw. Just my opinion. Is the sewing machine still in it? Jerry Yep, but it needs work. These sewing machine tables pop up often on sales sites. This one is going for $60 usd. I just missed out on a free one last week. I am thinking that it would almost be wrong to convert it. Decisions decisions. OCtoolguy 1 Quote
sydknee Posted March 17 Author Report Posted March 17 28 minutes ago, Scrappile said: Well, it would be one of the most beautiful scroll saw tables I have ever seen! My thought exactly. Just look at all those little ornate draws just begging for blades etc. OCtoolguy 1 Quote
dgman Posted March 18 Report Posted March 18 I showed it to my wife, she said it would be criminal to use it as a scroll saw table! OCtoolguy and wombatie 1 1 Quote
Scrappile Posted March 18 Report Posted March 18 The current generation, my kids and grandchildren, do not put the same value as the our generation and before did. I do not know if that is good or bad. but it is a fact. My wife is really struggling with it. She is an antique person. Our kids, not so much. Jim McDonald, Dan and OCtoolguy 2 1 Quote
sydknee Posted March 18 Author Report Posted March 18 1 hour ago, Scrappile said: The current generation, my kids and grandchildren, do not put the same value as the our generation and before did. I do not know if that is good or bad. but it is a fact. My wife is really struggling with it. She is an antique person. Our kids, not so much. Exactly so. Years ago nearly every house hold here had one of these. Those days clothes were often hand made or hand me downs that needed adjustments. Later there was a period where charity organisations were collecting them to send overseas. Now they all seem to end up as ornaments and tables. The price can vary hugely from the ridiculously high to the giveaway cheap no matter what the condition. OCtoolguy 1 Quote
rash_powder Posted March 18 Report Posted March 18 There are a great many of these floating around. I am not sure of the years of production, just that there are many. I have my Great Grandma's Singer treadle sewing machine in a cabinet very similar. The bulk of its value is sentimental and only to me. They do tend to sell for more the closer you get to large cities, such as Minneapolis (I am located a short drive West of Grand Forks, ND). If you feel comfortable drilling into it, go ahead. That said, the cover should come off easily and a clamping mechanism could be easily made to secure the saw without causing much/any damage. OCtoolguy 1 Quote
OCtoolguy Posted March 19 Report Posted March 19 On 3/17/2025 at 6:33 PM, Scrappile said: The current generation, my kids and grandchildren, do not put the same value as the our generation and before did. I do not know if that is good or bad. but it is a fact. My wife is really struggling with it. She is an antique person. Our kids, not so much. We have the same problem. Been collecting for years but can't sell any of it. The stuff I've collected will go to my sons. Guy stuff. Quote
Denny Knappen Posted March 19 Report Posted March 19 Dianne had one, I think it went to our daughter. I would not use it as a scroll saw table. OCtoolguy 1 Quote
Bill WIlson Posted March 19 Report Posted March 19 I like old stuff. I like the thought of salvaging those remnants from our past that trigger nostalgia & sentiment. I also like the idea of not wasting something that still has useful life in it. That said, I don't think our parent's generation worried too much about saving things for posterity. They used stuff until it was worn out, then repurposed it and used it for something else, until there was nothing left. If you were rescuing it from a dumpster and it had enough damage to discourage restoration and it looked cool in your shop, then I say go for it. Otherwise I think you could probably build a better, more suitable stand yourself and let some collector enjoy the sewing machine. OCtoolguy 1 Quote
Hawk Posted Friday at 03:56 AM Report Posted Friday at 03:56 AM For my 2 cents worth, I really like that idea. My thinking would be to remove the sewing machine, maybe add another top over the orginal to both cover the hole from the sewing machine and to add a bit of strength to it for the scrollsaw. What saw do you plan to put on it? Again, beautiful stand! Chris OCtoolguy 1 Quote
Jim Finn Posted Sunday at 12:05 PM Report Posted Sunday at 12:05 PM On a service call, about 1975 in Kenosha Wisconsin, I was in the basement of a local inventor, and he had 15 sewing machine bases like yours with various pieces of metal working machines mounted to them. OCtoolguy 1 Quote
flarud Posted Sunday at 04:40 PM Report Posted Sunday at 04:40 PM I have 4 or 5, maybe 6 of these. My wife has one that was her Mom's. My Dad refinished it around 25-30 years ago,, it still works. The others, I have torn apart and made table stands out of them. I say go for it! Jim Finn and OCtoolguy 2 Quote
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