cost effective for her? they cost enough to have templates, period.
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These are her early patterns in the paper bag and she has changed them as she grew as a designer. They cost about half of what her newer ones cost, and usually had less detail. I still own a whole bunch of these.
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Originally Posted by Belfrybat
(Post 6282893)
Thank you for the explanation. I feel a bit ripped off (not by the E-Bay seller), but I certainly expected that I could cut the items out without having to trace around them, especially with the images being overlapped. But it is what it is.
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For the cost of the patterns I would expect very good and clear I st ructions and strong templates.
Never seen her work before it. Is beautiful but not sure i would pay 100$ plus my post and a age to UK 20$ . Too ouch for me. |
Take it to your local copy center! If they try to tell you it's copyright protected, tell them it is for personal use so you can cut it up and still have the instructions.
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Originally Posted by mom-6
(Post 6284439)
Take it to your local copy center! If they try to tell you it's copyright protected, tell them it is for personal use so you can cut it up and still have the instructions.
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Originally Posted by Belfrybat
(Post 6281700)
I just received a used McKenna Ryan pattern I ordered off E-Bay -- Moose Crossing (1995). All that is in the envelope (which is a flat brown paper bag with colour photo on front) is one double-ledger sized piece of paper with the instructions on one side and a "life sized" placement guide on the other that is in reverse of the colour picture. Do you think this is the whole pattern? I had expected paper templates I could cut around and trace. Since the objects overlap each other, I have no idea how I'm supposed to make templates of these, especially since the instructions are on the back. Under "Steps for assembling" #3 states: "Cut out applique pieces and fuse into place, referring to placement guide and photo for placement." There's no mention of tracing the pattern. How can one cut out something that is layered over another object? Thanks.
Grab some tracing paper and start marking! |
Do you have a printer that scans or know anyone who does? I do a lot of fusible appliqué and it's a pain having to trace in reverse (so I can iron it to the wrong side of the fabric). Even though I can use the insert in my Horn sewing cabinet as a lightbox - I like to 'see' as I go along.
DH watched me muttering one day and asked why I didn't just print off the scan reversed :shock:...........who knew? Unbeknownst to me, and probably a lot of other people, there's a simple setting on the printer which allows you to either print normally or reverse the image for you! |
This is true - on my copier, it has a feature called "mirror image". And my copier is an old and very rudimentary model. I believe most copiers have this feature, although now that I think about it, I'm not sure that it matters if any of McKenna's appliques are backwards or forwards. Meaning, does it really matter if the bird faces east or west? :)
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