You all may have been watching the very cool replies I've gotten on my Forum discussion Bernina 830 with frame vs. longarms discussion. Here's the link, if it works: [url]forum/this-and-that-quilting-related/3774-benina-830-with-frame-vs-longarms[/url]
Anyway, Gammill is a sponsor of TQS, and I would bet that some Gammill people are reading the forum from time to time. I have been looking at all kinds of longarm websites. I've seen your wonderful new Gammill Vision...it looks fabulous--haven't tried it yet, but it's too big for my house. I am going to retire in a few years and I want to be a mostly full-time art quilter. But so far I don't think what I want really exists.
What I really want is something I'll bet a lot of quilters would love to have. I want a longarm on a smaller frame for quilting wall art quilts, lap quilts, crib quilts, and so forth that has easy advance of the quilt, an electric hydraulic lift so I can sit down in a comfortable chair and quilt for hours, and really good lighting, and really fine stitch quality with a stitch regulator. I want to be able to do really fine microquilting and detail work. And I want it to cost no more than $15K for the whole kit and kaboodle. :shock:
I'll bet that could be done. If not by Gammill, maybe by someone, and I bet it would sell even in these tough economic times. There are a lot of us quilters who can't fit the giant things in our houses and don't want a stationary longarm. I've seen that Handi-Quilter has a shorter version kind of like that, and I plan on trying it out. But that Gammill Vision really looks cool!
Anyway, Gammill, if you make such a machine, I'd be glad to be your guinea pig to try it out for you.