I am not a thrift store person. While I love the idea of revamping old stuff, thrift stores generally make me cough incessantly and want to wash my hands about 100 times. However, I was out visiting some yesterday afternoon, in search of something I needed for a project. I decided, kind of randomly, to stop at the Goodwill near my house (the one near 185th/Tanasbourne).
I don't expect much from Portland-area thrift stores. They never seem to have the awesome stuff that people I see online seem to find. (Certainly nothing as great as those mythic "tag sales" Martha Stewart is always talking about!) I expect even less from the ones on the westside but, under a pile of random crap, I saw what I thought was a retro mini desk. Perfect for a laptop desk in my new sewing room!
As I got closer I thought: Wow, that desk is very small. Is it supposed to be for a child? Then, after moving all of the stuff off the top of it, I realized that, duh!, it was a sewing machine cabinet. At this point, it honestly didn't occur to me that there would really be a machine in there. I was just thinking that the fact that it was an old sewing machine cabinet made it an even better choice as a desk for my sewing room.
Then I opened it up and, not only was there a machine in there, it was sporty and pink!
I looked in the drawers and found that they contained: the original manual, an incredible exploded diagram with every last screw in the machine labeled, and an assortment of feet (including a ruffler, an invisible zipper foot, and a darning foot). For $39.99, I wasn't going to pass it up.
Here's what I think I know about the machine . . .
It's a Nelco R-1000. Made in Japan for Nelco Sewing Machine Corp of New York. From what I gather, this isn't a brand that collectors get too excited about. It seems there are many more Japanese-made machines from the post WWII period than domestic machines like Singers. The information I've been able to find is sketchy, but I get the impression that Nelco machines were specifically-designed to be knock-offs of Necchis and Elnas (hence the name).
Nelco has quite the interesting history. Unfortunately, as one might expect, Necchi and Elna's reaction to the Nelco brand seems to have been less than positive.
I can't find any date on the machine or in the manual, but the inside of the cabinet is stamped "Jul 27 1965." I found an illustration of a later model in this ad from a 1969 magazine, so that timing seems about right for the machine.
It looks like the machine was purchased from Oden's Sewing Store in Omaha. (Which I prefer to think of as being run by Greg Oden.) I, of course, have no idea how it found its way out here!
In one of the drawers, I found a plastic ruler with a 1977 calendar on one side and the address of a (now-defunct) bank on the other. The bank address would have been maybe 1-2 miles from the Goodwill where I purchased the machine. That, and the fact that the machine appears to be in wonderful condition leads me to speculate that between 1977 and when it was taken to the Goodwill last Saturday, it may have just been sitting in a house in Oak Hills or Rock Creek.
In the photo above, you can see the buttons for adjusting the position of the feed dogs up or down. There's even an intermediate feed dog setting for sewing fine fabrics. Besides a bunch of crazy decorative stitches that I will probably never use, the machine does a regular zigzag and an automatic four-step buttonhole.
I guess the best news is that it works beautifully -- both fast and quiet! I'm going to have to play around with it a bit, but I think this may be a machine that I can actually use for non-quilting projects.
I plan to refinish the cabinet (and I do still plan to use it as a laptop desk when I'm not sewing) but I'm not sure about the metal handles. I can't decide whether they'll look better once the cabinet is refinished, whether I should try painting them silver, or whether I should attempt to find replacements. I'm guessing that finding replacements may be difficult, since they look like kind of an odd size, but I have some time to think about it.
If you'd like to see more pictures, please check out my Flickr set.



What a wonderful find! I recently found a similar thing at a nearby garage sale for $15. A treasure indeed! Congrats on a great find!
Posted by: Alexandira | July 27, 2010 at 05:04 PM
I would call this the Thrift Score of a Lifetime! I've been feeling the same about thrift stores in Portland lately - so thoroughly scoured by the time I get to them -but you have given me new hope. Thrift on!
Posted by: Amy Leigh | July 27, 2010 at 05:08 PM
Totally awesome! I love that you found it 45 years later and posted about it on its anniversary. So cool. You deserve it, yay! And it really does make a beautiful desk, doesn't it?
Posted by: greetingarts | July 27, 2010 at 05:18 PM
Not only is this awesome, but it's supper awesome! My daughters birthday is also July 27th, today she turned four. We, her and I together, love to thrift. She is a dress fanatic, and that is the only way I can ease her need for more. If I happen to find a "pink" sewing machine with HER birthday on it, she would have gone bonkers! Congratulations!
Posted by: Cheryl | July 27, 2010 at 05:26 PM
what a score!
Posted by: christopher lum | July 27, 2010 at 05:31 PM
What an amazing score!
Metal machines are the best, it'll probably last another 45 years!
Posted by: jess | July 27, 2010 at 05:31 PM
Lucky, lucky you! And it's PINK!!!
Posted by: Di | July 27, 2010 at 05:35 PM
I am not a thrift store person either but you may have changed my mind. What a cool find!!
Posted by: Colleen | July 27, 2010 at 05:39 PM
That's amazing, what a wonderful find!
Posted by: Fern | July 27, 2010 at 05:44 PM
That is way too cool. I think you just became one of those people online who manages to find amazing deals on things in thrift stores. Way too cool.
Posted by: N. Cripps | July 27, 2010 at 05:44 PM
Great find - love the pink!
Posted by: Margaret | July 27, 2010 at 05:51 PM
It appears to have been very well cared for. What a fun find. And the pink is a great big bonus! Looks like you are one of those lucky thrifters after all.
Posted by: Annette | July 27, 2010 at 05:59 PM
Spray paint is a wonderful cure for out-of-date-looking hardware - but that looks so mid-century modern that I don't think I would replace it. Great find!! Thanks for sharing!
Posted by: Sarah C. | July 27, 2010 at 06:02 PM
THIS IS UNBELIEVABLE!!! You lucky girl...you were in the right place at the right time with the right amount of money in your pocket. I love it...and it’s pink!
Genie @ buttonsforbaga.blogspot.com
Posted by: Genie Robinson | July 27, 2010 at 06:02 PM
wow, what a great find! love the pink
Posted by: Maggie | July 27, 2010 at 06:07 PM
I have sewn on the very same machine...except it was green. I loved that sewing machine. Because it has a pretty hefty motor, you can actually quilt on it but it will be a great for just piecing and mending. (Try a little quilting - I think you will be pleasantly surprised!)
Posted by: Suzan | July 27, 2010 at 06:10 PM
That is so freaking cool!!!
Posted by: Faith | July 27, 2010 at 06:11 PM
What a great find! It's so pretty too. Never seen a pink sewing machine before. Nice!
Posted by: Ghislaine | July 27, 2010 at 06:12 PM
What a total score! Nicely done. And though I do love a good thrift store, I am a frequent hand washer myself...
Posted by: mo | July 27, 2010 at 06:14 PM
Love it. Now you've been added to the list of those who have found treasures in the thrift stores. I'm still waiting on mine...
Posted by: Southern Gal | July 27, 2010 at 06:15 PM
My husbands Grandma sews on something very similar. It's pink, and a Necchi knock-off as well. I'm not sure of the brand of hers, but it is a Dial-a-Sew model.
Awesome thrifty find!!
Posted by: Mary Claire | July 27, 2010 at 06:15 PM
wow!! what a fantastic find!! I have the same opinion of thrift stores as you... but maybe I'll have to start perusing my local ones in search of finds like yours :)
Posted by: Natalie | July 27, 2010 at 06:15 PM
Wow, that is a great find and fantastic that it is working so well.
Posted by: Kate | July 27, 2010 at 06:17 PM
What a fabulous find.
A pink machine and everything!!!
Posted by: Andi | July 27, 2010 at 06:18 PM
wow!!!! so awesome!!! what a find :D
Posted by: Sarah | July 27, 2010 at 06:21 PM