Yet another new iron…

I recently taught at Quilt Fiesta in Tucson. (It is fun show if any of you can make it next year!) There were lots of quilts, and there were vendors. I walked the vendors at a slow time and darned if Jamie didn’t rope me in…

Jamie-EurosteamIron

How have I missed the EuroSteam booth at every quilt show I have ever attended? Who knows. But this time Jamie had my undivided attention and darned if she didn’t sell me a EuroSteam iron. (Let me just say, she’s good at her job.)

You can buy the iron online, but it’s cheaper at a show. Plus you get to talk to a person who is very familiar with it.

EuroSteamIron-1 copy

This is a heavy iron, which is fine with me. It has a ceramic sole plate that is supposed to never scorch. Dandy! It has an aluminum water reservoir, not plastic, so should last longer.

You see that plastic/silicon thing it’s sitting on? The iron lives there. It should never, ever, be stood up on it’s end. Jamie was very clear on this point. Enough so that I have not forgotten.

Jamie showed me how to use the measuring cup that comes with and was very clear that I should never, ever, (ever!) use distilled water. Irons need the minerals in the water. Without them, they spit (I forget why). There is a very good chance that I have ruined previous irons all on my own by disregarding the instructions to use tap water. The end of the long spout is flexible so that you can fill the iron while it is flat.

EuroSteamIron-2

This iron puts out lots of steam. And it does the job. Here is cotton/linen before:

EuroSteamIron-3 copy

And then after a quick-ish press:

EuroSteamIron-4 copy

The EuroSteam works better than my most recent irons. It cost $200 and, if it continues to work well, I will consider to be money well-spent. If you are interested, look for EuroSteam at your next quilt show and try one before buying.

FYI: If you read the instructions that come with the iron, you will find lots of warnings that lead you to think that if you don’t relieve the pressure in the iron (release steam) every 10 minutes it might blow up. Jamie assured me that I could pretty much ignore that. I didn’t mean to, but I did walk off and leave the iron hot and plugged in, with water/steam inside, for over an hour. It did not blow up. I am not saying that you should ignore the safety warnings, but I personally didn’t let them frighten me off.

And, back to the water: Sherman water is full of appliance-killing calcium and salt. Jamie said to use bottled water if I wanted to, just not distilled. I was about to use what I thought was bottled spring water until I looked at the label and noticed that it said ‘purified’. I googled it and it sounds like purified water has a lot of the particles removed from it, making it similar to distilled water which is not good for the iron. I chose to use tap water instead and will look for bottled spring water for my iron.

And I have promised myself that I will follow Jamie’s instructions and drain my iron when I’m done for the day, every day. Cross my heart :-).

11 thoughts on “Yet another new iron…

  1. I would love it if you would keep us informed about how you love this iron after a few months of use and if it lasts more than 6 months. I don’t mind paying for a good iron but lately they only last til the warranty is over. Thanks for all you sharing.

    Like

  2. I could not help but notice the blocks on the wall. Are they part of a new book? Liked the look.

    And, I also wonder how you will like the iron a few months down the road. I am tired of paying big bucks for irons and they don’t last long. So, let us know how it does say this fall.

    Like

    • The blue and white hexes are part of something I’ve been doing since I ran out of hand work. They aren’t necessarily part of a new thing, unless I get an appliqué border designed for them. Which is a distinct possibility.

      >

      Like

  3. Just remember to store your iron with the cap off. I didn’t and it needed a tedius cleaning because it just spit and didn’t steam the next time I tried to use it. But the Eurosteam people were wonderfully helpful on the phone. Great customer service and the iron works fine now.

    Like

    • Yup, Jamie was specific about that too. Seriously, she did a good sales/education job on me:-).

      I bought a $9 Sunbeam/Rival iron at Target a couple of days ago to use in class and amazingly enough, it’s doing a pretty good job! I’ll try to remember to instagram a photo of it tomorrow. I like it well enough I’m going to ship it home for my back up iron. It’s not good enough to be the main iron, but it’s a fine backup.

      >

      Like

  4. I use a vintage steam iron that had come from Sears. The instructions specifically say to use distilled water in it. I had to go out and buy a gallon! The iron is heavy, gets wonderfully hot, and puts out lots of steam. I went back to using it when my fancy iron with auto-shutoff died. Now I look for working vintage irons in thrift stores and have three or four, including one that’s a dry iron—no steam holes! All together they cost me less than $25.

    Like

  5. I know they all say to use tap water, but I have really hard water here. I use a combo of distilled water and tap water (half and half) and that seems to do the trick. I keep two bottles, so I can dump half the distilled water into the empty one, then fill both with tap water. I’ve been doing this for years and my iron is very happy.

    Like

  6. It’s been 5 yrs. since you bought the EuroSteam. Do you still have it? Have you gone on to another the real perfect iron? Tried the cordless ones? Shows are opening up again, my “at home” iron is dead. Hoping for guidance. Thanks!

    Like

    • I made the EuroSteam go away. It didn’t get hot enough to suit me. I’m using an Oliso now, the one with the retractable feet, and I like it a lot. It’s lasted more than a year, going on 2, which is good!

      >

      Like

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.