Financing your new sewing machine?

Sewing machine companies often run 0% financing promotions if you buy a new machine that’s above a certain price point (say $3000 & up). Purchases are made via a special credit card usually offered through Synchrony Bank.

Let’s look at Janome’s current Labor Day promotion.

To summarize:
0% interest for 36 months if you spend above $3,000.00 in a single transaction.
OR
5.99% interest for 72 months if you spend above $6,000.00 in a single transaction.

This offer is for charges made on the Sewing & More Credit Card issued by Synchrony Bank.

Before signing on the dotted line, be sure to read what consumer advocate Clark Howard refers to as the mice type.
The default interest rate on this credit card is 34.99% and the penalty interest rate is 39.99%. This is a HUGE difference from a 0% or 5.99% interest rate for a fixed period of time.

Let’s see what the numbers look like if I were to buy a Janome 9480 with ASR + tax + acrylic table insert to make the total transaction $6,000.00.

Loan TermLoan AmountInterest RateMonthly PaymentTotal Paid
36 months$6,000.00Zero/None$166.67$6,000.00
36 months $6,000.0034.99%/39.99%TBD$9,769.76 to $10,390.53
72 months$6,000.005.99%$99.41$7,157.45
72 months $6,000.0034.99%/39.99%TBD $14,416.72 to $15,896.96

The “gotcha” here is that if you fail to make timely payments or pay the full balance off at the end of the special interest term, the credit card company could apply the default interest rate retroactively back to the initial purchase date and/or invoke the penalty interest rate according to the card agreement rules. This means your purchase with higher interest rates applied could potentially cost you anywhere from 50% to 122% more than your original transaction amount. Ask yourself, “Can I make payments according to the schedule to avoid the high interest rates?”.

My personal take:
I’ve been saving up for a new sewing machine. When I’m ready to buy, the current plan is to time the purchase so that it posts to my travel rewards credit card right after the monthly statement drops. I pay my credit card in full every month, so the payment due date for this new charge would be almost two months away. I’ll earn rewards that I can later apply toward my credit card balance.

If my 8900 were to give up the ghost and I need a new machine before having the entire amount saved up, I would be totally fine with the 36 month special offer because: (1) the monthly payments fit my budget and (2) I have no concerns about paying the balance off by the deadline. If (1) and (2) weren’t true, I’d keep saving or consider alternative machines with large throat spaces that are within the amount I have saved.

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Quilt Backing Fabrics – Thrifty Edition

Quilt shop fabric in my area is now $14.00 + tax per yard. For charity or donation quilts that require 4 yards to make a quilt back, $60 per quilt isn’t sustainable for my budget over the long haul. Nor does it seem to be sustainable to those in my quilt bee group. Those ladies are a thrifty lot! Many only buy backing fabric for a donation quilt if they absolutely have to.

Sources of free to less expensive quilt backing fabric:

1. Free table at quilt guild meetings.
2. Community service fabric donations (sometimes batting is also available).
3. Shopping your quilty BFF’s fabric stash or scoring big at a destash sale.
4. Pieced backing using fabrics from your own stash.
5. Flat sheets (twin or full size) from big box stores or thrift stores.
6. Fabric cuts from thrift shops (like Mostly Mutts or Scraplanta).
7. Hobby-Lobby when quilting cottons are 30% off.
8. Michaels – Fabric Editions prints that are $3.99 per yard. Order online for store pick-up.
9. Wal-Mart – Waverly precuts are available in 2 yard bundles for less than $10.
10. Mark-down section at your favorite quilt shop.

Me? I check the free table, ask Community Service or see if I can piece odd fabrics from my stash to make a quilt back that coordinates with the top. If not, I’ll usually hit Hobby Lobby or Wal-Mart for suitable backing fabric. I can usually get the fabric I need for about $20-$25. That fits my budget.

For personal projects, I’ll buy full-price fabric from the quilt shop if the project calls for it. However, I still shop Hobby Lobby and the clearance sections of nearby quilt shops to find coordinating backing fabric.

Had to buy a replacement rotary blade for my Cricut Maker. Michaels in Alpharetta had them in stock. This location will be the big cut-to-order fabric store on my side of ATL. Saw some of the cherry fabric I’d bought on sale at Joann before they closed. Same fabric bolt is now $8.99 per yard. Michael’s rarely puts fabric on sale and it is usually excluded from coupons. Still adjusting to my new crafty shopping options and sorely missing Joann’s.

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Dental & Vision Insurance Benefits in Retirement

Are they worth it? It depends on your situation.

My husband and I early retired three years ago. As a teacher, our health insurance would continue with my pension benefit – but my district does not offer retiree dental/vision like some other districts in the area. Instead, we were able to continue our dental and vision coverage under under COBRA provisions for 18 months at employee rates. Had I known the rates would continue at what I paid as an active employee, I would have bumped up to a higher level coverage on the dental during open enrollment.

Once COBRA benefits ended, I researched other options available to us through various affinity groups. We chose to go with plans offered through my FSU Alumni connection for a 12 month trial period. After only six months, I can report we will definitely continue our vision plan and cancel the dental once my current plan of treatment is concluded. Why? For us, the dental plan has such a limited network of local dentists, plus a low reimbursement rate that isn’t anywhere near average rates for services in our area. We knew our current dentist wasn’t in network, but the reimbursement rates through my previous employer’s coverage were reasonable given the monthly premiums paid. Had I been able to access actual reimbursement rates before enrolling in the individual dental policy, I would have declined. For us, self-pay is definitely cheaper compared to having an individual dental insurance policy.

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