You can buy a Presser Foot Screw at "IronAway" store
There are 12 inches in a foot and four quarters on each inch so there are 12*4=48 qurters of an inch in one foot.
The presser foot grabs the fabric and pulls it through.
To do this, you must not only take off your regular presser foot, but take of the part directly above it. You must loosen the presser foot screw, and take everything off below it. Then, look for a part on the zipper foot that hooks around a little. Put that where the original presser foot and the "presser foot holder" was. Then tighten the screw. 1=Loosen the presser foot screw. 2=Remove the presser foot and the part that the presser foot snaps in and out of. 3=Find the hook-like part, the same as on the presser foot holder, and put it where the other one originally was. 4=Tighten the presser foot screw. 5=Put the zipper foot down. It should be a little bit higher than touching the sewing machine. 6=To move the zipper foot from left or right, loosen the screw in the back of the presser foot, and slide the foot from side to side! Then tighten the screw again!
The weight of one foot of a three-quarter inch diameter steel bar will be approximately 1.42 pounds.
The presser foot is the prong shaped piece of metal resting where the needle passes through the garment to be sown.
The presser foot grabs the fabric and pulls it through.
The shank on a sewing machine is the distance between the bottom of the preser foot and the screw that holds the presser foot in place. This applies to older sewing machines (usually pre-1980), as newer machines have a presser foot that snaps on, as opposed to screws on. --A high shank machine measures approximately 1 1/4" from the presser foot screw to the bottom of the foot, and uses High Shank presser feet --A low shank machine measures approximately 3/4" from the presser foot screw to the bottom of the foot, and uses Low Shank presser feet
The lever lifts the presser foot to remove the fabric after stitching.
The "presser foot" secures the fabric when it is being sewed and helps feed it through evenly so that the stitches are even and aligned.
holds the fabric while sewing. :)
Complemenation uses of languages such as that