[amayausers] Re: design on caps
- From: "pat" <post@xxxxxxxxx>
- To: <amayausers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sat, 21 May 2005 22:21:25 -0400
As a matter of curiosity, could I look at your picture too. Might help my
hat problem.
Thanks,
Pat Post
----- Original Message -----
From: "Rod or Sharon" <springer37@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <amayausers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Saturday, May 21, 2005 10:07 AM
Subject: [amayausers] Re: design on caps
> Hi Phyllis,
> I will send a picture to your email address as the e-group does not
receive
> attachments...too bad at times, as a picture, as they say is worth a
> thousand words. The picture is of a design I digitized for some Airborne
> guys to put on caps. I knew when I digitized it that I was pushing the
> vertical height to the max, the picture speaks for itself and addresses
what
> you have described.
>
> You have answered yourself, the lettering is too high on the cap. What is
> happening is the top of the cap is being stretched outward by the very end
> of the sewing arm and the front edge of the needle plate is distorting the
> cap.
>
> How does the inside of the cap look? Can you see where the center seam
> material is being scuffed or worn, maybe even cut clear thru?
>
> The solutions are to:
> 1. Reduce the size of the design a little.
> 2. Lower the design to the bottom of the sewing field...this still may not
> help completely, if the design is still too large.
> 3. This one you must be very careful, and I say very careful
with........you
> can disable your hoop limits in "Settings" and push the design even lower
in
> the sewing
> field. You can only push this by maybe 1/4 inch and no more as now the
> presser foot is riding the slope of the center seam of the cap and will
slip
> down the
> slope of the cap on the down stroke, push itself up against the back
> side of the needle and bingo, needle break for sure. So don't try pushing
> this too far.
> always remember to re-enable the hoop limit feature after completing
the
> project!
>
> The quality will always suffer on caps if the vertical height of the
design
> is pushed too far, especially with lettering. The best quality will be
seen
> if the design is kept at 2.25 in or under and even then, low or lower in
the
> sewing field.
>
> Rod
>
> Embroidery Cottage
> Rod & Sharon Springer
> Melco Trained Amaya Tech/Trainer
> Design Shop Pro+ Digitizing
>
> Boise, ID 83713
> 208-938-3038
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "PHYLLIS MCINTIRE" <PMCINTIRE@xxxxxxxxxxx>
> To: <amayausers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Sent: Friday, May 20, 2005 11:58 PM
> Subject: [amayausers] design on caps
>
>
> > Hi all,
> > I put together a design for a customer and sometimes the design sews out
> > great and at other times the top of the letters (only the top word)
come
> > out half there and some not at all. I don't like wasting hats but
husband
> > pushed me to do five.
> > my question is why would the this happen to some and not all? and could
> > part of it be that it may have sewed too high on the cap?
> > Thank you,
> > Phyllis
> > Crickets' Creations
> >
> >
>
>
- References:
- [amayausers] design on caps
- From: PHYLLIS MCINTIRE
- [amayausers] Re: design on caps
- From: Rod or Sharon
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- From: PHYLLIS MCINTIRE
- [amayausers] Re: design on caps
- From: Rod or Sharon