A friend of mine did his physics PhD on knitted materials. IIRC, his experimental model was monofiliment knitted sheets, made on a machine just like this one.
> Knitting is distinct from weaving: in weaving, fabric is created by interlacing 2 sets of threads at right angles to one another, while knitting involves taking a single thread and looping it around itself, one row at a time.
...now looking a little closer at my t-shirt and slowly realizing what I've been taking for granted.
A slightly hyperbolic but technically accurate description of knitting I once received that blew my mind a little was "tie this string into a knot in the shape of a sock".
At my last job I made an app that takes a bitmap as input and returns it converted to a coded pattern that's readable by a knitting machine along with knitting instructions.
The machines I made it for were 25-30 years old and my patterns would end up loaded on floppy disks. I played with some new machines though and tbh was pretty unimpressed with the progress. Nike and Adidas knit like all their shoes so I think the machine manufacturers are just all-in on that.
A lot of these knitting machines at some point upgraded to disks instead of punch cards, or had the ability to add them later. Some of them can use a data cable to a computer to control them.
There's also this really cool kind of hack called All Yarns Are Beautiful which switches out the knitting machine's computer with an Arduino with a custom hat to drive to the mechanism that controls the needles.
I picked up a Bond knitting machine ("the incredible sweater machine") for about 20 planetary credits last year. The pull length can be adjusted, alowing for diffrent yarn thikness but that's the only controll available. Anything you want to do beyond square single color pieces is very tricky, the notion that this machine "makes sweaters" is a joke.
That said, it's surprisingly fun to use. Looking forward to the dark months!
Oh what a trip down memory lane. My family in 80ies USSR had one of those. Me and my brothers were the manual labor moving the train thing left or right for my mother, it required quite a bit of force and muscle. He'd be on the left, and I on the right, pulling, with my mother putting yarn on. She could do amazing designs for sweaters, both colors and the shapes/patterns of the knit/weave. It made the most specific Whooozzhhhhzhhh sound as it went left and right. Was also kinda scratchy on the needles, if you weren't careful. I never saw those here, which makes sense, commercial machines killed that.
I love the mix of detailed encyclopedia-like information and institution-specific "ask Agnes" notes. Not sure what makes it so charming. Maybe it's nice to see such a high level of effort put into something without the expectation of a large audience.
My partner bought an old Brother knitting machine and ribber attachment during the lockdown. I think it was the KH820 if my memory serves me correct, one with a punch card reader.
When she bought it, the machine had been sitting in an attic for a couple of years so by the time she had it it wasn't in the best working condition. Took a little while for me to learn how to strip it apart and clean it, but one done it was back in perfect working condition. It's amazing how well some of these machines were designed. Easy to see why they can still fetch such an expensive price tag.
The rise of cheap and abundant clothing basically finished the production of domestic knitting machines.
Toyota stopped production around 1990, Brother’s last machine was produced in ~1997, and Pfaff closed their business in 2001.
Just like the Juki, Brother, and Toyota, Silver Reed was a Japanese company (known primarily for their typewriters). They moved their knitting machine business in the early 1990s to China, just around the time the SK840 model was released. No newer Silver Reed models were designed since then. Silver Reed (the Japanese one) itself is defunct since the Fukushima earthquake, I believe.
The only new model of knitting machine that can be slightly considered “domestic” is Kniterate (https://www.kniterate.com/). However, at this size and price (€16k) it’s more of a machine for fashion designers, dressmaking studios, and the like.
Personally, this makes me very sad. There was a time when hand-knitting offered endless possibilities and machine-knitting sorta like a fast, by very limited shortcut.
With the arrival of industrial machines like the Shima Seiki MACH2X not only it is possible to knit the whole garment without seams (as compared to already good circular hand-knitting), it’s possible to have some texture, too. All thanks to four needle beds instead of the traditional two. “Traditional” for industrial machines and some domestic ones like Pfaff Duomatic — most domestic machines typically had only one bed.
Unfortunately, with the death of domestic knitting machines, such technology would never be available for the regular people.
It does sound about as bad as I thought. This "death of domestic knitting machines" as you put it has turned it all into some weird steampunk, because these old models are being sold (I can walk into a store and buy a new Silver Reed where I live), so probably someone still makes them, but the technology has been locked in to these models from 80's. Unlike with the sewing machines, where they are still trying to come up with new models, by adding every sort of useless gimmick.
Wouldn't touch Kniterate with a long pole, because of the long term repair and maintenance outlook. They are basically single product startup, and no idea who their OEM is.
I’m sorry, I should’ve been more clear in my response. The Chinese-owned “Silver Reed” company still makes the SK280 and the SK840 machines that were designed by the now defunct Japanese company back in the 80-90s. These are the machines sold in stores. Some people believe they are of inferior quality when compared to identical models of [used] machines manufactured in Japan. And quite often (depending on your location) you could find non-used or slightly used examples for less money. However, old machines have to be re-oiled (since the oil has oxidised long ago), and have the “sponge bar” replaced (polyurethane foam is likely to be disintegrated, too). Personally, I have no opinion on “Chinese vs Japanese”, since I’ve once played with different models of Passap (also known as Pfaff).
But yes, it’s somewhat eerie to observe women (it’s mostly them who enjoy knitting) discussing what kind of model to buy, and having absolutely no clue that the knitting machine age is over.
As for the sewing machines, I think that the best option for any domestic user is to buy a vintage sewing machine. Models made in the 1960s and earlier typically don’t have nylon gears and don’t tend to go out of alignment if you happen to hit a sewing pin with a needle.
If you’re in the US, the models to look for are 4×× and 6×× series Singers, although there are tons of different options. The German-made Singer 401G in particular is considered the Holy Grail of vintage sewing machines because it’s a free-arm machine (only common in Europe since ~40–50s, not common in the US till the 1980s), has almost all the functions a domestic user may need, and has no plastic gears.
However, pre-1980s sewing machines have one huge disadvantage: they all had a [resistive] rheostat foot controller, which made maintaining low RRM practically impossible. The ones that came with a Triac in the late 70s and early 80s sometimes boasted the word “Electronic” somewhere on the case (this is the case with some Berninas, like the 830). If the machine doesn't come with a Triac foot controller, it’s best to adapt a modern one or do one yourself.
Other options are:
1) To replace the motor with a servo,
2) To add an RPM-control (PID ro ARDC) circuit (either with or without the encoder). One Back-EMF based example with Dremel-like tools is https://hackaday.io/project/166492-grinder-speed-control-wit.... But it doesn't apply to sewing machines well enough, since it’s difficult to determine very low RPMs needed in sewing.
3) Use pulleys, if you’re willing to sacrifice high sewing speed https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qKDSaNmB0rs
I do believe that some modern brands like Bernina and Pfaff make some advances, however I feel like most of them are related to quilting/embroidery, and not sewing. For example, there are no modern domestic sewing machines (besides the Sailrite) that can comfortably sew thick leather. Modern machines also have no real option for mechanical adjustment of presser foot pressure (important when you deal with vastly different thicknesses of materials).
Pretty much just Silver Reed, but their machines seem closest to the Brother and other Japanese models. The brand is UK but at least their knitting machines are built and ship from Japan.
A particularly cool paper of his: https://journals.aps.org/prl/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevLett.12...