Blogs

HoopingStation se consacre au partage de connaissances sur l'utilisation des machines à broder et des tambours à broder magnétiques. Rejoignez-nous et explorez le monde de la broderie, notamment avec l'aide de votre amie Sewtalent Brand !

A close-up shows a mini iron being used directly inside a large embroidery hoop to fuse small applique star pieces in place.
A front view of an SWF dual-head embroidery machine with both heads and the control panel visible, signaling high-volume production capability.
A Hatch screen view with dimmed artwork shows the placement lines and blanket stitch clearly, making the appliqué structure easy to verify before stitching.
A close-up screen capture shows a manually drawn centerline being traced through the letter “T” before converting it into a bold Triple Run stitch.
The Brother Innov-is XV begins stitching the first color of the scanned owl design onto green fabric in a standard embroidery hoop.
The hoop is flipped over and a backing fabric is secured with four pieces of tape, demonstrating the floating-backing method before the final seam stitch.
The Perfect Placement Kit packaging is shown close-up, highlighting examples of embroidery placement on pillows and towels.
A cosmetic bag is stretched snugly over the Fast Frame size E, clipped in place for clean, fast embroidery without traditional hooping pressure.
A cleanly revealed owl shape after the batting is trimmed close to the tack-down stitching, showing crisp edges and accurate alignment.
A host holds the massive 10 5/8" x 16" hoop beside the Brother Luminaire XP2 to show the true scale of the embroidery field.
A close-up of the Brother Luminaire projector displaying a blue decorative stitch directly on the fabric for real-size preview and adjustment.
A close-up view of the Smartstitch multi-needle head showing needle bars, presser feet, and tension components where thread-break problems usually start.
A full frontal view of the Barudan BEXT-S1501CII single-head commercial embroidery machine on a clean white background.
The finished Elf Legs embroidery is held up in the hoop, showing clean dark green outlines with lime and red stocking stripes on green felt.
A fully revealed Brother PR670E sits on a table, ready for its first setup steps after unboxing.
A close-up of a stitched “Mountain Expedition” logo forming cleanly in blue and white thread inside an embroidery hoop.
An operator aligns the top magnetic frame over a drawstring cinch bag on a hooping station, moments before the magnets snap closed.
A finished yellow towel is held up to show a crisp “Happy Easter” embroidery result after proper stabilizing, hooping, and design orientation.
An overhead view of a knit beanie secured on an 8‑in‑1 frame on a Ricoma MT‑1501, showing the full clamp-and-stabilizer setup as the stitch-out nears completion.
An extreme close-up of the EverSewn Sparrow X2 automatic needle threader lowered into position around the needle.
Close-up of the embroidery machine stitching a tack-down line through green glitter vinyl during the side-bow appliqué.
A close-up shows the embroidery foot stitching a neat blanket stitch right along the edge of the fused pumpkin appliqué.
A screen capture shows a chef’s hat area transformed from a flat fill into a diamond-textured pattern fill inside mySewnet/Premier+2.
A close-up shows the tricky side latch on a cap frame being clicked into place on the cap driver—exactly where most hat-hooping frustration happens.