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  2. Buttonholer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buttonholer

    Greist Mfg Co. produced a buttonholer adapted to fit White Sewing Machine Company models, and which is internally identical to ones it produced as the Singer 160506 and 160743, or later 489500 and 489510 template-driven buttonholers. Under contract to White, the attachment was branded the 'White Magic Key Buttonhole Worker'.

  3. White Sewing Machine Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_Sewing_Machine_Company

    White Sewing Machine Company manufactured automobiles, trucks, buses and agricultural machinery White Sewing Machine Company 1941 company book. The White Sewing Machine Company was a sewing machine company founded in 1858 in Templeton, Massachusetts, by Thomas H. White and based in Cleveland, Ohio, since 1866.

  4. Button - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Button

    Flat buttons may be attached by sewing machine rather than by hand and may be used with heavy fabrics by working a thread shank to extend the height of the button above the fabric. An assorti of shank buttons. Shank buttons have a hollow protrusion on the back through which thread is sewn to attach the button. [25]

  5. Buttonhole - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buttonhole

    A buttonhole is a reinforced hole in fabric that a button can pass through, allowing one piece of fabric to be secured to another. The raw edges of a buttonhole are usually finished with stitching. This may be done either by hand or by a sewing machine. Some forms of button, such as a frog, use a loop of cloth or rope instead of a buttonhole. [1]

  6. Singer Model 27 and 127 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Singer_Model_27_and_127

    The button is located on the improved shuttle frame, Singer part number 54507, ... White Sewing Machine Company's "Number 8", a copy of the model 127.

  7. Vegetable ivory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vegetable_ivory

    An early use of vegetable ivory, attested from the 1880s, was the manufacture of buttons.The material is called corozo or corosso when used in buttons.Rochester, New York was a center of manufacturing where the buttons were "subjected to a treatment which is secret among the Rochester manufacturers", presumably improving their "beauty and wearing qualities". [5]