Singer Sewing Machine Model 1120 User Manual

Posted on by

Jun 02, 2012  Singer Repair Manuals Not the owners manuals, but the shop manuals to actually fix and adjust the innards of these things? I've tried a bunch of places but all I find is parts books and owners manuals. In some cases, a Singer Instruction Manual may cover a specific series of machines (multiple models from the same group or “family”) so a small portion of the manual may not pertain to your exact model. We always try to provide the manual with the closest match to the sewing machine model number provided). This is an initial list of all the available downloadable sewing machine manuals, service manuals, parts lists and instructions that could be located. It is not, nor ever will be, complete but we will endeavour to update it when new sources come to light. Singer sewing machine Model 1120 is economical and good for new sewers. 23 built-in stitches, 40 stitch functions, 4-step buttonhole, built-in needle threader. SINGER 1120 User Manual Page 3. As the owner of a new Singer sewing machine, you are about to begin an exciting adventure in. From the moment you first use your machine, you will know you are sewing on one of. Please read carefully to determine which instructions apply to your particular model machine.

  1. Singer Sewing Machine Model 2662
  2. Singer Sewing Machine 1120

Singer Sewing Machine Model 2662

Sewing machines. 1120 Manuals; Manuals. SINGER 1120 Instruction Manuals and User Guides. We have 1 Instruction Manual and User Guide for 1120 SINGER.

ISMACS International
International Sewing Machine Collectors' Society

Singer Sewing Machine 1120

  • Research

    Manufacturers

    If your sewing machine, accessory, or ephemera has a name on it, this is the place to start. If we don't have a listing for the name, please use the search function to see if there is any mention of it on our site.

    General Information

    Toy Sewing Machines


    About Us
  • ISMACS News Magazine

    ISMACS News

    ISMACS News is the magazine of the International Sewing Machine Collectors' Society published four times a year for society members.

  • ISMACS Membership

    Joining ISMACS

    The International Sewing Machine Collectors' Society is the premiere sewing machine collector's group. A quarterly magazine and access to our annual sewing machine auction are but two membership benefits.

  • ISMACS Email Digest

    Joining the Email Digest

    The ISMACS Email Digest is the place to ask all your sewing machine questions. You will be greeted by the internet's finest people and your enquiries will be answered by leading experts.

A descriptive list of all* Singer's sewing machine production..

(Classes 1 to 99)(Classes 100 to 199)(Classes 200-299)
(Classes 300 to 399)(Classes 400 to 499)(Classes 500 to 9999)

Game maker manual download

This catalogue largely reflects the output of Singer's factories in Elizabethport, Bridgeport (USA) and Clydebank (UK). Some German and Canadian models are included and, from later years, a few from Japan, Italy, France and Brazil. The rule of thumb is: a 'K' between the class number and variety (or sub model) number, e.g. 29k58, indicates Clydebank; a 'W' (e.g.12w1) is Bridgeport; 'A' is Anderson; 'J' is St. Johns, Canada; 'M' is Italy; 'G' is Germany; 'C' is Brazil; 'U' is Japan, etc. Just a hyphen was used by the flagship factory in Elizabethport. This is almost always reliable but there are anomalies. Often, machines with the same class and variety, but produced in different factories, are identical - but not always. I've duplicated the information, however, where differences might occur. They are in number order first, then by factory order alphabetically.

Not all the class numbers are unique. There is no similarity, for example, between the model 12k and the model 12w. Singer inherited the W numbers from Wheeler and Wilson - maybe it had already established a strong customer base used to W&W numbering - anyway, the numbers were preserved (along with many of W&W's unique design features). Occasionally there will be a domestic that apparently has the same number as another industrial model; I have no idea why. The numbering is loosely chronological; they started around No.1 and sort of worked their way up.

Abbreviations should be obvious and will include:
SDA = Singer Driving Attachment (to allow many machines to share a common rotating shaft)
SPI = Stitches Per Inch (stitch length)
SPM = Stitches Per Minute (speed)

Most of the data is compiled directly from Singer documentation, service manuals, etc. I've noted where successive versions of a manual showed conflicting data. I am still compiling more details as I find them and if anyone has details of missing machines and could scan the manual's 'description' page, I'd be delighted to continue expanding the list.

The dates are not always reliable and are presented solely as a guide. Some discrepancies occur because the production and availability of machines differed between USA and UK factories, which didn't necessarily follow the same marketing plans. Details of the more modern models from The Sewing Machine Blue Book and the T.E.F.A.C. Sewing Machine Guide & Directory. Hp owners manuals free downloads.


John Langdon

*Author's exaggeration.


ISMACS is an organization totally independent of all sewing-machine manufacturers, past or present and is not affiliated with any of the companies mentioned in these pages. Please Note: Do not contact any ISMACS official in an attempt to solicit a valuation - it is not possible other than by hands-on assessment and your request will be ignored.

All rights reserved by ISMACS INTERNATIONAL, under International and Pan American copyright conventions. Reproduction or copy of this page, in any form, in part or in whole, is strictly prohibited, without prior, written permission.