![]() They came with black painted wooden legs or metal legs. The most common Featherweight tables are the ones with the black painted table rim and legs. A two-legged Table Extension with brown metal legs was also manufactured to accompany the brown-legged table, but they seem to be much more difficult to find than the black style. The brown top rims were also metal rather than wood compared to the black painted table rims. The first tables in production were painted a milk-chocolate brown on the tabletop rim and legs. Below are the various options that can still be found at antique shops, flea markets or even the occasional yard sale - don't forget to look at what the garage sale goods are "sitting upon", or take a peek under the tablecloth of the cashier's table! ![]() Today, some of the most collectible sewing machine tables and cabinets are the ones for the Featherweight. Singer tables were what any 1940s homemaker would have wanted to accompany her machine: an adaptable table for sewing or hosting! Below is a cute ad from Singer, marketing the different ways one of their tables could be used.
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