Feed dogs

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Needle plate, presser foot, and feed dogs
Closeup of feed dogs showing teeth rising up through the needle plate

Feed dogs are movable plates which pull fabric through a sewing machine in discrete steps between stitches.

Action[]

A set of feed dogs typically resembles two or three short, thin metal bars, crosscut with diagonal teeth, which move both front to back and up and down in slots in a sewing machine's needle plate: front to back to advance fabric gripped between the dogs and the presser foot toward the needle, and up and down to recess at the end of their stroke, release the fabric, and remain recessed while returning before emerging again to begin a new one.

Name[]

This arrangement is called "drop feed" in reference to the way the dogs drop below the needle plate when returning for the next stroke. Allen B. Wilson invented it during the time period 1850 to 1854,[1][2] while also developing the rotary hook. Wilson called it a "four-motion feed", in reference to the four movements the dogs perform during one full stitch: up into the fabric, back to pull the fabric along to the next stitch, down out of the fabric and below the needle plate, and then forward to return to the starting position.

Stitch length[]

Virtually all drop-feed sewing machines can vary their stitch length; this is typically controlled by a lever or dial on the front of the machine. They are usually also capable of reversing the feed dogs' motion to pull the fabric backwards to form a backstitch.

Video[]

Video of feed dogs in action on a Hua Nan sewing machine

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Wilson received US patent 12116 on 19 December 1854 specifically for the four-motion feed; however, his machine that won US patent 9041 on 15 June 1852 was already using a moving feed dog whose tooth emerges from a slotted plate.
  2. ^ The date of 1850 is given by James Paton in his "Sewing Machines" article in the Encyclopædia Britannica 10th Edition, Retrieved 2010-08-06 from http://www.1902encyclopedia.com/S/SEW/sewing-machines.html, but as noted, Wilson's idea evolved over the course of his patents


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