Your embroidery machine is stitching its little heart out, and then you turn away for a second and…. Whirruuuuuh. Total silence envelops the area as your machine comes to a stop!
From the top, it looks fine, but when you try to remove the hoop from the machine, it’s stuck. When you try to look underneath, all you see is a complex web of threads holding it together. What is this, how did it get there, and how can you prevent this?
Birds’ nests are cozy homes for birds, but they don’t evoke the same warm feelings in machine embroidery. After frustration, destroyed garments, and a loss of time, the word “bird nests” in embroidery is like saying a bad word!
What are Embroidery Bird Nests & Why Do They Happen?
A bird’s nest is bunching up of thread on the underside of the stitching. From above, it appears good, but it gets stuck in the bobbin hook and eventually halts your machine.
An imbalance of thread tension usually causes this issue if the bobbin or upper thread is not threaded correctly.
- The top thread was threaded with the presser foot down, all the tension discs are locked, and your thread cannot get between the discs.
- You bypassed the take-up lever on the home machine, now allowing the thread to be drawn through the tension discs.
- If you do not secure or insert the bobbin thread correctly, it will spin freely, creating a tangled mess (a bobbin bird nest).
- If your bobbin is backward, be sure to check your manual. Putting it backward can allow it to have too little tension.
- Dirty or poorly maintained embroidery machines. Keep your machine and bobbin case free and clean of dirt and grime.
- Burrs on needle plate which can catch a thread.
- The orientation of the embroidery needle is wrong; remember that needles have a front and a back.
- Bobbin tension needs adjustment (always consult your manual before changing bobbin tension). A properly adjusted tension may mean you never adjust the top tension knobs. You can adjust the bobbin case tension one-quarter turn at a time, but that should be a last resort. Most malfunctions like this happen because of bad maintenance or a design that doesn’t let the thread fix itself.
- Flagging occurs when a commercial frame bounces or the garment pulls on the hoop on any machine. The material can experience extreme flagging if you loosely hoop your items. I prefer securely hooped items over floating ones on a hoop because hooped items always have better quality.
Commercial or tubular machines may experience more mechanical issues, as incorrect rotary hook timing or needle bar height can increase bird nesting problems.
So, we need to answer two questions:
How Do You Prevent Birdnesting Embroidery?
This sounds so easy, but it can be easy to forget.- Keep your machine clean, and remove stray threads.
- Because it’s easy to get distracted, you should take time when loading bobbins and prevent incorrect threading. Make sure the presser foot is up to disengage the tension discs.
- Always visually check your thread path; trace with your fingers.
- Use good quality thread and needles.
Preventing bird nests comes from prevention, which is pure and simple. When you start using your embroidery machine, pay attention. Take your time threading it and inserting the bobbins. If the machine is new, make sure to read the manual.
How Do I Fix Thread Nesting On My Embroidery Machine?
If the item hasn’t torn the fabric or made a hole, you can probably fix it carefully and with the right tools. But don’t start “manhandling” the situation by pulling on the hoop aggressively.Gently create space between the bobbin plate and the hoop, and then use your “tools” to do the rest of the job.
If you can get the hoop off without disrupting the garment, you’re back in business quickly!
- Don’t pull or tug (you can tear fabric or existing embroidery)
- Don’t start cutting without knowing what is happening underneath
- Don’t unhoop if you don’t have to
- Cut embroidery threads and remove the hoop.
- Slowly pick out tightly packed threads from the needle plate.
Cut threads singularly and leave the garment hooped to continue stitching if possible.
After the embroidery process, you may discover the nest on the needle plate. However, extracting the bobbin or bobbin case could be challenging. Pick out the threads one by one until you can reduce the nest enough to remove it. After you have cleared it, check the needle plate and/or bobbin case for damage and replace it.
On to the garment!
You have two choices…- Cut loops on the back and pull the remaining threads from the top to remove stitching. You must restitch this or think of another way to cover the damage.
- Trim the nest so that only short (1 cm/.25 in) tails remain, and secure with an iron-on stabilizer. Although the threads may not stay put when washed, you can save them for items you don’t use often.
Conclusion: Thread Nests Aren’t The End Of Your Embroidery
Bird nests are unfortunate occurrences, but luckily, they are not the end of your embroidery project! Keeping your machine clean and threading correctly reduces the chance of a nest popping up (or down) in your stitching. If a nest should happen, try the different ways we’ve discussed to salvage your garment.
This was a very knowledgeable read over my morning coffee. Thank you so much. So far ?my bird nests have been fixable with careful monitoring. Thank you so much. Love these tips snd tricks
We’re happy to help Helen! Nothing goes better with embroidery than coffee 😛
I HAD A PROBLEM LIKE THAT BUT I RELISED MY BOBIN CASE PLATE BROKE BUT THEY REPACED IT WITH A NEW ONE & GAVE ME EXTRA BOBINS TREADS IM HAPPY ALWAYS CLEAN MY MACHINE I LOVE LOOKING AT YOUR NEW IDEAS AS IT BRODENS MY TALENT I TAUGHT MY
SELF TO DIGITIZE WITH SOME IDEAS I GET FROM YOU AS A EXPERT YES TENSION PLAYS A BIG ROLL AS WELL BUT
AS A MALE EMBROIDER I LOVE THIS MACHINE RICOMA 15 NEEDLE VERY NEAT ON STITCHES AND YES CANT SAY MUCH JUST ENJOY YOUR
VIDEOS NEVER KNOW TOO MUCH WILL ALWAYS HAVE A BOOBOO SOMEWHERE BUT THAT WHAT MAKES YOU PUSH MORE & MORE THANKS
FOR YOUR SHOW IM FROM SOUTH AFRICA MY LINE IS SIGNAGE SO IVE GOT BOTH SKILLS ALWAYS DID GRAPHICS & CLEANING UP THATS WHERE
EMBROIDERY FITS PERFECT IN MY JOB ANYWAY KEEP WELL KEEP SENDING IDEAS CHEERS MARTIN
Thanks Martin! Glad you got it up and running again 🙂
Birds nests are the ABSOLUTE worst. Thanks for the good tips.
We couldn’t agree more! Thanks for reading
nice to know that the item can be fixed. great article
Thanks for reading Rosie 🙂