cuffs054,
What are you looking to accomplish?
There are many things I wish I would change with how I went about getting my machines, but now I have 5 of the damn things.
I will say, I love my Creative Vision 5.0, but I wish it was the 5.5 (improvements on a few things).
The Creative 1.5 is an excellent piecing machine. It has no problems feeding small pieces of fabric.
The Creative Vision has me spoiled though because it has an automatic presser foot, so that includes auto hover and pivot as well. (When I take my foot off the pedal, the foot lifts slightly with the needle down so I can turn my pieces.)
Something I wish I understood better going into this is needles, needle size, thread and bobbin thread make all the difference in the world.
What I wish I would have started with, after all the money I spent, was an old (vintage) straight stitch machine IN a cabinet, an old machine with a tall throat. Now I am having a dining table re-purposed to have a machine dropped in so I can have a flat bed for quilting.
Oh, the other thing, if you are going to be interested in embroidery down the road, buy a used high end machine from a dealer that will let you trade that machine in for something different and give you everything you paid back into the new machine. Get a machine with a full touch screen that allows you to modify the embroidery ON the machine, adjusting placement, sizes etc. Embroidery software is ridiculously expensive. Most of the Pfaff/Viking/Singer machines come with access to basic tools that will let you take normal fonts from DaFont.com or various places and turn them into embroidery fonts. The machines that have the screens built in that allow you to adjust layout will typically weld the letters together better than what the intro software will allow you to do on the computer.