🪡 Stitch Your Dreams into Reality!
The Brother XM2701 Sewing Machine is a lightweight, full-featured electric sewing machine designed for versatility and ease of use. It boasts 27 built-in stitches, an automatic needle threader, and a drop-in top bobbin, making it ideal for both beginners and advanced users. With included accessories and lifetime support, this machine is perfect for a wide range of sewing projects.
Is Electric | Yes |
Power Source | Corded Electric |
Item Weight | 12.6 Pounds |
Item Dimensions D x W x H | 15.3"D x 5.86"W x 12.01"H |
Material Fabric | Metal |
Color | White |
S**L
Love this sewing machine, great for beginners
I am new to quilting and wanted a good sewing machine for a not so expensive price in case I found out quilting is not for me. This machine is great. Takes time to learn how to thread but once you learn it it is a breeze to use. It seems great . I would recommend this for beginners in sewing. Lightweight and cute. Multiple stitch selections also. Following the YouTube tutorial was also a great help in getting my machine up and running.
K**O
Great sewing machine at a fair price!
Bought as a birthday gift for my daughter!Sewing machine is beautiful with a great design on the side! Many settings to sew and design all sorts of cool and creative items!
M**E
Absolutely love this sewing machine!
Fantastic sewing machine. The manual is very handy and easy to read. The sewing machine works great, easy to use. Have used on several different fabrics and does a good job! Very happy with my purchase!!
A**N
A VERY nice cheap option for a high quality machine
An awesome beginner sewing machine! Its size is perfect for mine and my husbands space. It’s very sturdy and has a nice heavy weight to it that makes it feel very quality. The threading helper is a lifesaver and makes it so much easier to use. Would definitely recommend to any seamstress. First thing i used it for was making a liner for a backpack i crocheted
I**T
Runs great, is quite loud
I bought this machine to do some light quilting and general sewing. I have a much older Brother but it's having some mechanical issues so I needed a cost effective replacement to finish of a huge project and decided to stick with the Brother line.It's a fairly decent machine for the price. It doesn't have a lot of extra stitches, but I rarely use them. I found it does accommodate 2 needles (which is a specific type), that was interesting. It's easy to thread and use the bobbin. It sews in a fairly straight line. The biggest issue is the thumping noise, it gets loud and mostly happens if more than 2 layers of material and thin 100% cotton batting. It sews through it great, again, it's noisy. Overall there's some nice improvements from my 25yo machine and is very user friendly. The stitches are very consistent regardless of speed. For $90 it's a worthwhile purchase for light sewing.
M**0
For the price, I think it’s the best sewing machine
I love the sewing machine. It is easy to use it is self threading and self bobbing. However, I have not figured out the self needle. Other than that it’s a great machine for the price. I have so many things since I have got it and absolutely love it. I also bought a thread that goes with it I highly suggest doing that.
C**S
Great machine!
I love this machine! It is easy to use and very high quality. Best bang for your buck
P**S
Perfect machine for a beginner or novice
TL;DR The negative reviews scared me but the price and features ultimately convinced me to buy the machine, and I'm glad I did!I've been sewing very sporadically since art class in my senior year of high school in 2007-2008. I know the very basics of using a sewing machine but I've never used anything other than a straight stitch! I'd been using my sister's Singer Esteem to make masks for myself but when she moved a few miles away this month, I found it considerably less convenient to pop over to her house, so I started looking into buying my own sewing machine using Unemployment Insurance money.I knew I didn't want a Singer Esteem--that thing gets jammed if you look at it wrong. If ever faced with the choice to buy a Singer Esteem, please save yourself the trouble and just don't. There are things I like about it but ultimately it's mostly a pain in the neck. Upon conducting some research, I made a list of must-have features for me, a baby: adjustable speed, drop-in bobbin, & mechanical. I encountered the Brother XM2701 on many lists of best sewing machines for beginners, and it met all of my needs and generally received better reviews than, say, the Janome Magnolia 7318 at a better price point. I also had my eye on a Janome New Home available at Urban Outfitters for $165. You know, because it was pretty. I mean, it also fell in the lower half of my price range. Ultimately, though, that Janome only has 15 stitches, and paired with a truly cursed side-loading bobbin (which is also the scourge of the Singer Esteem that I hate so much), it seemed not worth the money when compared to a Brother XM2701, which has everything I absolutely need plus some nice bells and whistles like an automatic needle threader, some pretty decorative stitches, and a one-step buttonhole. Plus it has a thread cutter attached, which is essential; the Janome did not. For $201 (from Kasande Beauty Fast Shipping), this seemed like a no-brainer.I wasn't thrilled to be choosing between UO, a company I'd rather not buy from, and Amazon, a company I loathe because of its treatment of its own workers, but I figure a reliable sewing machine will be somewhat of a necessity for the next few years. I'm not better than you because I hate Amazon--we're the same because I still use it. And the brand has made itself a staple, so we're all going to come up against these moments where we have to choose to use it or look elsewhere. This was the most financially feasible option this time, so I chose Amazon. I did choose an independent seller without Prime shipping--but with free shipping--so the experience was really the best possible outcome.Anyway, Kasande Beauty Fast Shipping did, indeed, ship my item quickly so it arrived a few days later (I wanna say 2 or 3 days later?) in perfectly new condition as described. Setup was easy and I watched the instructional DVD via someone who'd uploaded it to Youtube because I just didn't feel like popping the disc in my PS4. I can't recommend that video highly enough--just brace yourself for the narrator. Her style of narration is extremely strange in ways I can't describe but it might grow on you. I followed her instructions to set up my machine. That narrator quickly ascended to the very top of my list of celebrities I'd like to meet.I also recommend keeping the user manual close at hand--it'll tell you everything you need to know about what settings to use for each stitch, and it'll have troubleshooting tips if things go wrong. I also recommend finding an independently-uploaded video on thread tension, because that can be tricky to grasp without precise visuals. For a straight stitch out of box, I'm using the setting just below 2.5, but it took a lot of trial and error to come to that conclusion.Other little things for beginners or seldom-sewers like me to get started easily? Use polyester thread if you can--choose a good brand like Gütermann if you can afford it. Using cotton threads and low-quality threads apparently gunks up your machine faster, which isn't the worst--you just need to clean it more often--but left untouched, can lead to it not working and needing servicing. I'm just paraphrasing what I read in the Questions section of this product page. If you buy extra bobbins (which you may not need--the machine comes with four, if I'm not mistaken), make sure they're Class 15 plastic bobbins. Have an iron (any old iron--I'm using my 10-year-old Toastmaster from college that I haven't used in about 8 years) and ironing board (or just a towel--because I don't have an ironing board) handy for lots of pressing! Keep an eye on the needle's sharpness and -do- change it when it gets dull rather than riding it out--if you work with knives, doing prep work, I know you feel me. If your needle's still sharp but not cutting it, you may be using the wrong needle for the job! You wouldn't use a nakiri to cut sashimi (well, you might use it to cut, for example, avocado "sashimi," so maybe this is a bad example). You wouldn't use a butter knife to cut steak. If the feed dogs won't feed because you're sewing the very edge of a piece or just a very small piece of fabric (which happened to me when I tried to sew a 1" x 6" pocket for a nose wire), put a piece of regular old paper--newspaper, notebook paper, printer paper, magazine paper--whatever you've got--under the fabric to cover all the feed dogs. It'll be louder than usual, but it'll get the job done! And you can easily tear the paper off the back of the fabric when you're done. Way less messy than it sounds.Overall, this machine operates smoothly and sews beautifully even stitches. It's easy enough to use--from auto-threading to bobbin loading--that I believe it would even suit a child as young as 9 or 10, if you were to find yourself with a kid eager to start on the DIY path (and if you had $200 to drop on a machine that will likely last them years, maybe decades--we'll see--with good maintenance habits). In my very short time sewing with it, I've learned so much and I have visual evidence that my sewing is already improving, getting neater, because I'm working with a quality machine that does everything it's supposed to do, and does it well without jamming. I assume that despite still-developing motor skills being what they are, a 9- or 10-year-old would be able to sponge up fluency in this machine even faster than I can. I don't know why I'm trying to push this machine for kids--I just like the idea of kids who want to learn to sew, and I wish I'd started earlier because it feels empowering.I'll drop by with an update in a few months.UPDATE 2022:Still love this machine. 💖
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