I actually use a beard trimmer bought at walmart for $10. It works real good. I have used it several times to take names out of shirts and replace them with new names for sports teams. Of course I don't guarantee the quality and or that I won't damage the shirts but I haven't lost one yet. Dianne D-stitch embroidery -----Original Message----- From: amayausers-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:amayausers-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Linen Barn Sent: Monday, February 07, 2005 4:35 PM To: amayausers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [amayausers] Re: Stitch eraser After you remove the stitches it will show but how much depends on what type of material its on. If it isn't going back over the same exact spot I would recomend taking out the stitching and selling it to someone as a defective item at a discount. I have always used a razor blade to remove stitches. You have to be real careful but after 10 years we have it down pretty good. I have heard the stich erasers work well, just never tried one. You will probably get more feedback on this :) Aaron Sargent The Linen Barn linen@xxxxxxxxxxx Medford, Oregon ----- Original Message ----- From: "Russell" <russell@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> To: "amayausers" <amayausers@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Monday, February 07, 2005 4:08 PM Subject: [amayausers] Stitch eraser > Do they work? If so, when you remove all the thread with the garment look ok or will there still be a mark where the mistake was made? I put a company logo on the left chest of a work jacket and forgot to rotate the design a quarter of a turn, would I be better off embroidering over the mistake with another design and sell it as a second? > Thanks for any replies > Russell Silva > R. S. Embroidery > 508-222-4433 > >