"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
You will want to eventually do digitizing in house IMO. Every machine sews a little different and digitizers will miss this mark at times. You will want to be able to edit and eventually do it in house. To start work with someone like: http://www.vitordigitizing.net/ is who we used for a bit back in the day with good results. Learn caps, IMO if you can sew caps you can sew just about anything. Beanies are good to learn on as well as they are cheaper. Good luck and you will hate it in the beginning haha.
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on November 16, 2016, 01:10:30 PMYou will want to eventually do digitizing in house IMO. Every machine sews a little different and digitizers will miss this mark at times. You will want to be able to edit and eventually do it in house. To start work with someone like: http://www.vitordigitizing.net/ is who we used for a bit back in the day with good results. Learn caps, IMO if you can sew caps you can sew just about anything. Beanies are good to learn on as well as they are cheaper. Good luck and you will hate it in the beginning haha.We got the Wilcom E3 software. What are you using for digitizing software? How hard is it to learn? Ideally we would like to do it in-house, but I'm thinking for starters we will send it out and just focus on trying to figure out how to actually do the embroidery part of it.For caps, which are more ideal, 5 or 6 panel?And I'm sure I will! ha!
One backing will not work on all garments. And you will need Solvy (or something similar) for doing pique , knit hats and towels etc.