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Needle, Sewing


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Nom de l'objet : Needle, Sewing
Matériaux : steel, paper
Numéro d'accession : BE2009.1.215
Date de début de production : 1920
Date de fin de production : 1930
Description : A package of Singer Sewing Machine needles. Consists of package and two needles. The front of the package reads "Needles" and "Singer Sewing Machines, Price 5 cents. The Singer Mfg. Co." The package is green with the large red "S" logo in front of a lady at a sewing machine. Written in pencil at the top of package is: "6 n 1-3".
Fonctions : The Singer Manufacturing Company was incorporated in 1863 and is still in operation today. The red "S" girl trademark was introduced in 1870 and became one of the world's best known emblems. The invention of the sewing machine is generally credited to Elias Howe, Jr., of Cambridge Massachusetts who obtained a patent in 1846. The design was slightly different from the sewing machine that exists today but it was on the market beginning in the 1850s. Improvements to this design were completed by the Wheeler and Wilson Company of Water Town Connecticut whose first patent in 1850 differed with the use of a _straight vertical needle and a double-pointed shuttle_. Ref: _Handy Things to Have Around the House_ by Loris Russell. When the company moved to Bridgeport, they became known as Wheeler and Wilson's Manufacturing Company in 1856. By 1858, they had sold 20,000 machines per year and by 1871, the number had peaked to just under 130,000 machines of various styles. Wheeler and Wilson also opened an office in London in 1859. In 1905, Singer took over the company. REF: http://www.sewmuse.co.uk/w&w.htm.
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Ville de l'établissement : Mississauga
Province de l'établissement : Ontario

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