tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1251786284399859238.post4772578540605679730..comments2023-05-17T04:56:00.302-07:00Comments on The Textile Fringe: BERNINA Embroidery Software 6 - Outline Design - Tool Tip 3The Textile Fringehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03712008306566799205noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1251786284399859238.post-22576015009598508332013-10-27T18:07:00.071-07:002013-10-27T18:07:00.071-07:00Dear Ola
Could you please contact me about the Ozq...Dear Ola<br />Could you please contact me about the Ozquilt Network conference in Canberra - email to president@ozquiltnetwork.org.au<br /><br />Regards<br />Margery GAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1251786284399859238.post-71006764558725516842013-04-23T12:09:32.671-07:002013-04-23T12:09:32.671-07:00That's a nifty feature! Thank you for making t...That's a nifty feature! Thank you for making the video tip! <br />Might you tell me how I can tell the software that I want the start/stop point of a specific shape to start somewhere OTHER than the default? I'm building my own appliques, and I haven't had much success with the two applique builders in Designer 6, so I've built a work-around:<br />1. Scan the shape<br />2. Have my husband or housemate auto-vector the cleaned up shape, in their version of Corel Draw!, and have them save it to Corel 14.0, so Bernina Designer 6 will read it.<br />3. Import the design into Designer.<br />4. Put a 3pt outline on the vector image, and a different color fill.<br />5. Convert vector to embroidery<br />6. Delete the 3 pt outline entirely<br />7. Change the fill to single outline (Color A).<br />8. Duplicate the outline, and change to different color (Color B).<br />9. Change Color B to Blanket stitch, setting it to Offset, width 0.05<br />10. Duplicate Color A, and change to Color C<br />11. Set Color C to Satin Stitch, width 0.07<br /><br />The problem with this is that all three colors start their stitch-outs in the same place. It gets very messy under the hoop, and can be given to knotting up/breaking the thread. I can't for the life of me find/figure out how to have the stitches start in different parts on the different layers. Do you have a tutorial for that, that my google-fu failed to find?Snobahrhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02928721323176737304noreply@blogger.com