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Lego Wear Adventure logo machine embroidery design

Anventurers Dinosaur Island logo machine embroidery design (with applique element) created for Lego Wear clothes. Big size: 200 x 120 mm Format for tajima embroidery machine - dst. Denisov Embroidery Studio is team of experienced, high professional digitizers and artist providing embroidery digitizing services to cloths, home decor, and apparel and embroidery industry since 1997. We offer custom machine

Lego Wear logo machine embroidery design

embroidery digitizing designs for garment studios and textile manufacturers, promotional or advertising products, uniform shops logos and individual embroiderers. We accept artwork in all graphics formats (ai, eps, gif, bmp, png, psd, cdr, jpg..) which you can send us at e-mail for custom embroidery design digitizing order or stitch count estimate. CUSTOM EMBROIDERY DIGITIZING FOR ALL EMBROIDERY MACHINE FORMATS (Brother, Bernina, SWF, TAJIMA, Pfaff, Melco, Singer, Husqvarna, Janome, Barudan..) We do provide custom machine embroidery digitizing which means as per your requirements (digitize embroidery designs),

Saving a stabilizer for machine embroidery

I have repeatedly written about the uses of different materials instead of stabilizers: a post about replacing the stabilizer on the different means at hand, and in the post to replace the water-soluble film on the other materials were at hand, and in a post on the intensive care unit remains water-soluble film. I do not know the others, but I theme savings stabilizer interested, but so far I have not touched. So, it's time.

why talk about this economy, I know and I use in practice. And I know, in general, a bit:

? Instead of cutting off the stabilizer piece, appropriate to the size of the hoop, you can cut a piece of 4-5 times longer on one side, then turn out like in the photo below shows an example with filmoplast:

That is, the remaining piece dangling from my left or bottom of the machine. Then, when I unhooping embroidery stabilizer, I'll cut or rip it close to the embroidered and re hooping for the next stitch. This saves a decent amount for each hooping. If the edge of the stabilizer strongly faltered from the hoop, then it straightened out enough of it to iron the iron.

? Like many I collect scraps of water soluble stabilizer so that they can be used on some small machine embroidery projects.

? On the resuscitation of a water-soluble film remains of a film can be stapled. I do not know what makes it so, but saw recommendations sew tape water soluble thread.

? You can try to glue water balances soluble film, lightly spray the edges. I tried, and found that for me, this method is too complicated - it is likely to dissolve the film at all.

? The same goes for cutting and detachable machine embroidery stabilizers - can collect the remains and also to use later. I saw just curious advice sew the remnants of the stabilizer common thread, until you reach the desired size and hooping is a "patchwork quilt". I'm not sure I stitched piece will also perform well in his role as a whole.

? I myself did not try to sew, I tried a lighter version of the extensions simple stabilizer - glued pieces of ordinary paper tape. But I tried to stick together so that the abutment pieces together with duct tape is not exposed to embroidery, and was on the side of it. The only disadvantage - similar to the stabilizer has a different thickness and hooping will have trouble.

? adhesive stabilizer do not need to sew, you just need to put the pieces slightly at each other and they stick together under the iron.

? In addition, the pieces of the stabilizer can lengthen, these scraps can also be used to just put a layer of stabilizer under the hoop without hooping. This is a fairly common form of stabilization.

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