Twenty plus years ago I bought my wife a Swiss made Bernina 1000 sewing machine. She hated it from day 1. It was used two or three times and then put away, finding itself moved once in a while, while sorting or purging. Every Annapolis Sailboat show I'd go to, I would end up spending much time in the Sailrite section, salivating over the machines, Always asking myself, how I can scrape together that much money? Dont get me wrong, worth every penny. Then recently my wife pulls out the old Bernina, hours before her flight to Ireland and tries to hem her new Jeans she wants to wear on the plane. She comes out of the room, saying "I'm done with that machine, you try it!" Never being the person who shied away from a challenge, that night while she's on her way to Ireland, I took a piece of Sunbrella and tried my luck. First two layers, then four, both with various stitching patterns. I was doing well. I cut more cloth and teaching myself various seaming and stitching techniques. Thats when disaster struck. The needle struck the bobbin case and snap. I put fresh needles in, but all it did was bend or break them. I pulled what I could apart, cleaned and oiled, but to no avail. I decided, while my wife was gone, I would get it fixed. A week later it was home. While at the store, I asked the owner, if this was a medium or light duty machine. He showed me what it could do. To my amazement it stitched a leather belt. He said the trick is to have the correct needle, thread and speed for each type of material. I went home with a new excitement, spent the evening, measuring, cutting, ironing and sewing, making line covers to go over my white line cushions, using velcro and string ties. Now I have a list of things I want to make, just need to find the time to make them.