About Janome
The leading edge of the home
sewing revolution.
Janome has been at the cutting edge of sewing technology since the earliest
days of our founding. We were the first to develop a computerized machine for
home use (the Memory 7, in 1979) and the first to offer professional style
embroidery to the home market (the Memory Craft 8000, in 1990). Today, we offer
the most advanced machines ever conceived, the amazing Memory Craft 11000. We can
proudly claim to deliver the most powerful, sophisticated home machine on the
market, with patented stepping-motor technology and industry-leading software.
Yet equally as important as our innovative technology is the mission behind it.
We know the most important thing about our products is not the machines
themselves, but what you create with them. The better your tools, the more
inventive, artistic and pleasurable your sewing experience. That's why we design
our machines for performance, but also for comfort, quality, and intuitive ease
of operation. At Janome Canada, we want our products to inspire, not
intimidate-because the most important function our machines perform is to set
free your creativity.
The Founding Of New Home
In 1867, William Barker and Andrew J.
Clark began producing the "New England Single Thread Hand Sewing Machine" in
Orange, Massachusetts. Over the next 20 years, the New England machine and the
"Home Shuttle" were their two most significant products. In 1882, the company
reformed under the name New Home (a combination of the labels New England and
Home Shuttle), and it continued to operate under that name for the better part
of a century. In 1960, ninety-three years after Barker and Clark first
collaborated, New Home and the "New Home" brand were purchased by the Janome
Sewing Machine Company of Tokyo, Japan. For a more in-depth article on the early
history of the company, visit The International Sewing Machine Collectors'
Society and access the piece called "The Men Behind New Home".
Janome Begins
In Japanese, the word Janome (pronounced Ja-NO-me)
means "eye of the snake." The company earned the name in the 1920s when founder
Yosaku Ose, a pioneer in Japanese sewing manufacturing, began to use a round
metal bobbin system instead of the traditional long shuttle. The Japanese
thought the new round bobbin looked like a snake's eye, and from the innovative
design, a name was born. Janome has been leading the industry with such
innovation ever since. The company now has sewing divisions in the United
States, Canada, Mexico, Europe, Australia and New Zealand as well as agents in
Africa, Central and South America and throughout the Pacific Rim of Asia. The
company's manufacturing prowess has also made it a world-leader in the
production of high precision robots. In 1979, Janome technology introduced the
world's first programmable, computer sewing machine - the MEMORY 7. Today, our
Memory Craft computer models consistently stand out in the industry for their
ease of use and precise stitch results. Take a look at our Memory Craft 10001
and our newest embroidery software products: Customizer 10000 and Digitizer
10000.