"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
been learning Wilcom myself for the past couple of months. Its complex, but the basic stuff is not that hard. For simple stuff the auto digitize works great, you just have to correct the order it sews, for some reason the software never does it right. And its bundled with Corel, and they interact with each other, for us it sux because we are Adobe people. But I am getting used to it.
I've been quietly reading this topic for a while now. We've been outsourcing all our embroidery needs but haven't been able to find a decent supplier that meets our needs for turnaround and (contract) pricing. Just pulled the trigger on a 2 head machine. We'll see how it goes and how much money we are able to make off of it.We were making decent money with outsourcing so I'm guessing we'll be able to grow and make good money bringing it in house. Even if we don't have enough production daily, there's more work that needs to be done around the shop so a new hire was already in our (near) future.Digitizing is what troubles me. Our machine comes with Wilcom software but it's going to take a while to learn how to work with it.Anyone knows of a good digitizing service we can begin with?
Quote from: dirkdiggler on January 27, 2016, 07:51:08 PMbeen learning Wilcom myself for the past couple of months. Its complex, but the basic stuff is not that hard. For simple stuff the auto digitize works great, you just have to correct the order it sews, for some reason the software never does it right. And its bundled with Corel, and they interact with each other, for us it sux because we are Adobe people. But I am getting used to it.We are Adobe people too, hope there's a way not to use Corel, no one in the company (we employ 3 designers) knows how to work with it
You wont have to know how to use corel to work with it. Wilcom will just bring in the file (it uses corel to do it). You will still do a lot of work not a lot "auto" about it if you care about the sew out. But it will help you in some cases.
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on January 28, 2016, 08:12:27 AMYou wont have to know how to use corel to work with it. Wilcom will just bring in the file (it uses corel to do it). You will still do a lot of work not a lot "auto" about it if you care about the sew out. But it will help you in some cases.1 color simple logos, it seems to work. But it gets the sewing order wrong. Still learning though.
Quote from: dirkdiggler on January 28, 2016, 08:31:41 AMQuote from: GraphicDisorder on January 28, 2016, 08:12:27 AMYou wont have to know how to use corel to work with it. Wilcom will just bring in the file (it uses corel to do it). You will still do a lot of work not a lot "auto" about it if you care about the sew out. But it will help you in some cases.1 color simple logos, it seems to work. But it gets the sewing order wrong. Still learning though.Often the software will have stitches going wrong way in parts of the logo vs other parts, using wrong stitches, and often on lettering a mess. It still requires a good bit of work. Nothing automatic about it in any case ive seen. Yes some half ass users would just auto digitize it and sew. But that wont keep customers lol.