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Although I don't really plan to investigate working at stitch level, it turned out that even simple vector-based and auto-digitized designs do gain from making changes at this very low level.
You can reuse the pictures. In the wiki, click on picture to make it larger, then click again and save it.
Quality and level
This text should technical people get going with Stitch Era. I use it an optional master degree course in educational technology.
Next steps
none so far ....
Part of a QR tag
Two examples I encountered:
In my first one-day SEU class (oct. 2011), someone wanted to create a fairly small QR tag. Digitizing is easy, since QR code only has one color (black) and clean lines. However, there are many jump stitches and instead of removing all these, you'd rather have them pass through the corners of the rectangles. Of course, a few will remain as you can see in the simulated picture below.
Eyes are always a problem. Small circles are not auto-digitized or turn our to be rather slim and ugly ZigZags. One solution is to make these bigger, an other is to add stitches manually and/or move them.
More to come (hopefully) - Daniel K. Schneider 15:38, 7 October 2011 (CEST).
Open the SVG in either Illustrator (preferably) or Corel. If you don't own either one you can try importing via Inkscape or else vectorize the PNG picture...
Import the SVG opened in Illustrator to Stitch Era with Artwork->Get from Application
Since the eyes are made of four layers (black head, white eye balls, black pupils and white pupil part) we should simplify. We do it the easy way:
Select all (CTRL-A)
Combine Vectors -> Simplify. This operation will punch all the objects on top through the objects underneath, i.e. we we will wind up with a simple flat structure
Flattened ladybug vector art
We then further simplify the drawing by removing the vector borders.
In the Object manager, select all the vectors that have borders and make them fills only (in the format panel on top, click on the Vectors Only Body rectangle)
We then closed the holes in the black pupils since we would like to stitch the little white circles on top of the black pupils
Move the little white circles out
Select each black pupil and in the Reshape panel, click Remove holes.
Move the white circles back
Finally, combine the 2 parts of the mouth (Combine->Addition)
For easy of stitching, move all the black vectors up and you should have something like this:
Flattened borderless ladybug vector art
Select all
Convert->To Embroidery
Select Art to Stitch (Intelligent) ... using default parameters
If needed, adjust stitching order by dragging stitch sections up or down. I print red first, then black, then white.
The planned stitches will look like this (I provisionally made all the white stitches violet, since you can't see white on white...)
Auto-digitized ladybug
From my small experience I already can identify several issues. For example, our lazy "flatten" the whole vector art may not be ideal. E.g. when areas touch each other, there will be many stitches on a border and that will make the embroidery a bit too stiff (it's usually better to have some overlap). We also could change the ZigZag of the black pupil to some radial structure.
Auto-digitized ladybug - simulated stitches
However, in this example we are only concerned by the small white circle on top of the pupils and the mouth. Both may come out a bit too small. One solution would be to change the vector art, e.g. make them wider. Another solution to tune directly the stitch section, both shape and some parameters. Instead we will play with stitches here.
(2) Adding Stitches
Zoom in as much as you can (i.e. 2500 %)
Tick all the buttons in the button left panel (show sections, markers, connections, etc.)
Hit F12 (or select Edit Stitches in design panel, left/up of workspace) to enter the Stitch Edit tool
Select at stitch, then move with LEFT/RIGHT arrows until you find yourself at the beginning (somewhere on top). The select node comes after the black arrow (showing the incoming thread).
First/start node selected
Select Insert in the top left Stitches & Jumps ribbon panel.
Now add stitches. I added an outline plus two stitches within the circle. Select "Move" again once you are done or directly hit F11 to exit from the stitch edit tool.
Stitches added
Make the color white again and regenerate the stitches.
Ain't she got a lovely right eye ?
Auto-digitized ladybug - one eye with inserted stitches
Of course, we now should stitch this for real and then decide if our design is better. Maybe later, but I hope that you understood how to insert stitches with the stitch edit tool.