Stitch Era - stitching children's drawings: Difference between revisions
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For a picture like this one you could imagine lowering the density to 4mm to make it less heavy to wear. I would have to test this (not done yet). | For a picture like this one you could imagine lowering the density to 4mm to make it less heavy to wear. I would have to test this (not done yet). | ||
For more information about | For more information about digitizing, read the other Stitch Era tutorials. | ||
You also should learn how to trouble shoot, in particular how to fix broken direction lines. | You also should learn how to trouble shoot, in particular how to fix broken direction lines. | ||
* Open the object manager and fix one by one each error. Click on the object you want to fix, either in the object manager or the error console and hit SHIFT-F6 to maximize. Then most, often delete all yellow direction lines except one. This one make sure that it stretches all over the stitch section. | * Open the object manager and fix one by one each error. Click on the object you want to fix, either in the object manager or the error console and hit SHIFT-F6 to maximize. Then most, often delete all yellow direction lines except one. This one make sure that it stretches all over the stitch section. | ||
== View the result before you stitch == | |||
* Untick Auxiliar, tick Embroidery and it CTRL-F9 if you made any modifications | |||
* Open the View Tab and Select 3D in Draw Mode. You can adjust quality and luminosity with the little pull out menu. | |||
[[File:stitch-era-viewer-papillon.jpg|thumb|600px|Stitch Era 3D viewer]] |
Revision as of 20:05, 13 September 2017
Introduction
This article will describe how to stitch scan's from children's drawings (and later maybe) give advice on what kinds of drawings are easier to stitch.
Firstly you should scan the drawing or if you don't have a scanner take a clean picture.
Dealing with a PDF scan
Our computer at work produces PDF from scans, a format you cannot import to Stitch Era. There are two paths: Either import the PDF to a drawing software or save the PDF in a picture format and directly import to Stitch Era.
Tracing with either Inkscape or Illustrator has two major drawbacks. It will create one single path with a single color. Adding color to elements then means to make cuts in selected areas of the vector path and color.
Therefore we suggest translating the PDF into a PNG image file.
- Under Windows, you can use the commercial Adobe Acrobat Pro program (I don't know if the free reader can export)
- Under Linux, either install ImageMagik or search for another solution. ImageMagik also is available for Windows and Mac.
Conversion with ImageMagik, using the command line:
convert -density 300 -quality 100 input.pdf output.png
Vectorizing a drawing in Stitch Era
If you can rely on a clean scan, you should be able to reduce the colors to the ones that the child really used.
Clip the picture
Firstly you should crop the image
- Import the picture
- Select
Artwork
tab, thenOpen Image
(button to the left in the menu bar)
- Select the picture
Artwork
tab, thenLayout> (subtab), then
Crop Image
- Start in the upper left corner and drag the cursor. It will crop if you release the mouse button. Hit CTL-Z if you got it wrong.
Resize the picture
- Select the picture
- Click on Artwork -> Image
In the upper left you can change its size. e.g. the width to 90 (which means 9cm). You also can reduce vectors or even stitch areas, but its easier to reduce the picture first.
Reduce the colors
In the same toolset (Artwork->Layout) you can reduce colors. For an embroidery you should use a minimum of colors, maybe between 5 and 10. We strongly suggest to do this even if you believe that you only can see X colors. Various physical constraints from paper and drawing plus the scanning will actually give you lots of colors.
- For the following drawing I counted the colors (5) plus white background: 6 colors
- Enter the number and if you are happy with the result click Accept. Too many colors is better than not enough since you always can merge later.
Create a vector image
Now should create a vector image. In theory you could directly digitize pictures but this only works with a given kind, e.g. portrait with strong contrasts.
Select Artwork -> Image
tab
- Decide if you want to reduce holes. E.g. set holes to 10.
- Click on
Filter
(not need to reduce colors but to pre-process the picture). Make sure that white is selected as transparent if white is only background. If the child did use white that must be stitched then deselect.
- Vectorize using the standard settings first. Hit the
Vectorize
Icon. If you want to simplify the result a bit, try setting sharpness to a higher value.
- Vectorizing takes some time. Watch the progress bar in the lower left before you think that the program is stuck.
- Then in the right picture panel, select "vectorized" if necessary.
- If you are happy with the result click
Return
. Else read more in the Stitch Era - digitizing complex bitmap images tutorial
Auto digitize
Select all.
- Click in an empty space, the CTRL-A
- Select embroidery tab and then hit
Art to Stitch
For a picture like this one you could imagine lowering the density to 4mm to make it less heavy to wear. I would have to test this (not done yet).
For more information about digitizing, read the other Stitch Era tutorials.
You also should learn how to trouble shoot, in particular how to fix broken direction lines.
- Open the object manager and fix one by one each error. Click on the object you want to fix, either in the object manager or the error console and hit SHIFT-F6 to maximize. Then most, often delete all yellow direction lines except one. This one make sure that it stretches all over the stitch section.
View the result before you stitch
- Untick Auxiliar, tick Embroidery and it CTRL-F9 if you made any modifications
- Open the View Tab and Select 3D in Draw Mode. You can adjust quality and luminosity with the little pull out menu.