Supreme x Singer SP68 Computerized Sewing Machine
Supreme vs. Original

Supreme version
Original — Singer
SP68 Computerized Sewing Machine
About the original
The Singer SP68 is a computerized sewing machine with 548 stitch applications built from 300 individual stitch patterns, an LCD screen, two built-in lettering fonts, a one-step fully automatic buttonhole, programmable stitch memory, and an automatic needle threader. Singer Corporation was founded by Isaac Merritt Singer in 1851 in New York and patented the first practical domestic sewing machine; the brand remains one of the oldest and most widely distributed sewing companies in the world, now headquartered in La Vergne, Tennessee. The FW22 Supreme version is the same SP68 finished in a red colorway with co-branded Singer and Supreme markings on the front plate and retailed at $598.
About Singer
Singer is an American sewing machine manufacturer founded in 1851 by Isaac Merritt Singer in New York City. The company produced the first commercially successful sewing machine and patented the foot-treadle mechanism that replaced hand-cranked operation. Singer also pioneered the installment payment plan, making the machines accessible to households and small garment operations. By 1913, the company was producing over two million machines a year. Today the brand sells mechanical, electronic, and computerized machines for home sewing and quilting under parent company SVP Worldwide. Supreme has collaborated with Singer on co-branded sewing machines.


