On Tue, 02 Nov 2010 12:49:17 +1000, hopper
>snicklefritz <me@nothere.com>:sayed
>>On Mon, 25 Oct 2010 11:04:31 -0600, snicklefritz <me@nothere.com>
>>wrote:
>>
>>Could someone help me with this? Critique' please. Thank you
>>
>Have you ran the file in a "sewing simulator"??
>
It doan look like it... :-)
Doan even need a simulator.
This is where "which came first, the chicken or the egg?" could come
in handy!
A simple pressing of "delete" will fix that bit.
>I ask as there is one glaringly obvious error.
>
Eh!! You've done that too!! /giggle...
You have!
Stop lookin' at me like you ain't!
Snickle,
Am interested how the square blue part sews.
Currently colour two, it will become colour one very soon. (!)
It stitches over itself (needle points are over the previous row) on
the outside of the square. The spacing for the stitches to progess up
the design only occurs in the middle.
If you have sewn this out, does the outer part of the square look less
dense or perhaps more sparse than the middle of the blue square??
(For Hopper, tatami stitching decides row spacing at the turning
stitch. The width you set it is created at the turning, so the width
from the last row stays even. This is not happening in the blue part,
so I can't figure how it is going in and out of the tatami style of
stitching).
Pictorially, the rows look like this (each row being two rows of
stitching - 8 rows) --
--------==========----------
--------==========----------
--------==========----------
--------==========----------
Does that make sense??
The needle points on the edge of the blue are falling exactly into the
previous row, but they separate in the middle, and then they return to
the same holes as the previous row again.
So the outsides of the blue may seem less even, or "sparse" to the
eye.
And the second WR (that's the hint Hopper diddun give you!) is not
neat in the second half of the W. The second V part if you wanna call
it that. At the join, where it crosses and goes vertical again.
It may not sit flat, cos there's an area where the stitches bunch up
and form a small gap.
This may not sew as a "gap", but it may form an uneven ridge.
Stability of fabric and use of good underlay will tell you what we can
only see on the computer.
Pixie :-)))
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