Richard Grover Posted November 14, 2018 Report Posted November 14, 2018 I have been scrolling for several years (new to the Village). I am interested in now starting to make my own patterns, mostly portrait from photos. I have tried "Rapid Resizer" and "Coyote Stencil" results were a modest OK. I hear a lot about GIMP and Inkscape. What do you pattern designers use and why. I really don't want to dabble in two programs, I would rather learn one and go with it. It's hard to teach an old dog new tricks, so one trick at a time is all I can handle. Gene Howe 1 Quote
jollyred Posted November 15, 2018 Report Posted November 15, 2018 There are tutorials in the resources area of this forum for both Inkscape and Gimp. They will get you going. As far as portrait style patterns from photos, Inkscape will not work as well as Gimp. Quote
Richard Grover Posted November 15, 2018 Author Report Posted November 15, 2018 OK thank you, that is good to know. Quote
whitewolf710 Posted August 24, 2019 Report Posted August 24, 2019 if you can find an old copy of adobe cs which is what i use and am currently using it has surprising results in a short time Quote
JustDucky Posted November 5, 2020 Report Posted November 5, 2020 I would like to start to make my own patterns, however I have a chromebook and Inkscape is not supported. Any ideas? Quote
Dan Posted November 15, 2020 Report Posted November 15, 2020 Richard, I agree with going with GIMP. If you follow Travis's tutorial it's pretty easy to get a good start. It does involve a little effort to get a good pattern, but after doing a few you should be able to remember the steps and knock them out faster. Be sure to start with a high-quality photo to get the best results. Quote
jerrye Posted November 16, 2020 Report Posted November 16, 2020 For simple conversion of photos to patterns, I find Cute Cutter to be very good. Simple, easy, quick, effective. https://cutecutter.com/ Smitty54 1 Quote
Wile E Coyote Posted February 19, 2021 Report Posted February 19, 2021 (edited) I use a program called Create It and can be found by going to craftingtech.online. It is not a free program, but what you make on your first pattern/portrait it will or could pay for a full year of use. I do portraits of people and works great. I used to spend 10-20 hours making a portrait of a person now normally in less than an hour depending on how much detail the customer wants. It will also check for fallouts. Here are a couple of pictures that I made for some fellow scrollers on another site. Edited February 19, 2021 by Wile E Coyote wording was under the pictures Quote
Rockytime Posted February 20, 2021 Report Posted February 20, 2021 Sounds interesting. I'll look into it. Quote
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