T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
3772.1 | more interest... | MSHRMS::GOGUEN | | Fri May 11 1990 10:16 | 5 |
| My wife would also be interested in this, if their is such a program
that exist.
-Paul
|
3772.2 | Me too, please.. | AYOV29::JBECK | Jim Beck | Fri May 18 1990 12:06 | 9 |
| I would also be interested in said software, as justification for
having bought an Amiga, under the guise of
"Educational for the kids...Budget control...Word Processing...etc"
As my wife is heavily into knitting, this would be a definite Brownie
point.
Jim
|
3772.3 | Anyone home? | SNOC01::RODDY | | Tue Jun 19 1990 22:36 | 11 |
|
Hmmm...
Not much response guys - I guess such a thing might result
in scheduling problems eh?
Cmon, give the missus a break, I'm sure some of the techies
could knock this one over in minutes.
Thanks in anticipation.
Regards, Phil.
|
3772.4 | Are you sure that's what you want? | FENRYS::mwm | Mike (7.14MHz just isn't fast enough) Meyer | Wed Jun 20 1990 14:15 | 12 |
| re .2 - there's a package called "The stitchery" on fish disk #350 that "loads
in IFF images and creates charted patterns from them for use in cross-stitch
and other forms of needlework." That might be worth a look. Especially if
you want to buy more memory or a high-res printer.
re .0 - I'm not quite sure what you're asking for. If you're referring to
the patterns with cut-outs of the garments on them, the best I can offer
is to look at various image entry/editing systems (aka "paint programs"),
and there are then a fair number of packages for printing "posters" from
IFF images.
<mike
|
3772.5 | More specifically | SNOC01::RODDY | | Thu Jun 21 1990 00:17 | 18 |
|
Hi Mike,
Re: -1 (ref .0)
What I imagined was for cut-out type patterns to be stitched
together on a sewing machine. ie. Trace over a small book
pattern, scale up by say 5 times, then print out on my
80 column printer (Epson LQ500). The final size of the pattern
would require a sheet of paper around 4' x 3' - therefore the
program would need to split up the pattern vertically so that
it could be printed on 80 cols and, once printed, the paper
could by realigned to form the full-sized pattern.
I have some "paint" programs, but they don't seem flexible
enough to do the job.
Thanks again.
Regard, Phil.
|
3772.6 | Yep, you're sure. | FENRYS::mwm | Mike (7.14MHz just isn't fast enough) Meyer | Thu Jun 21 1990 14:41 | 12 |
| That's what I thought you might be trying to do. The best I can offer is to
draw the patterns in a paint program, and then use one of the "poster-printer"
programs to print them out in the form you want. I know of two, one from
Digital Creations, and Deluxe Print from EA. I don't know if either are still
being sold, and haven't used either. Try the latest issue of Amiga World or
some other Amiga-specific high-ad-density magazine for ad's for these things.
Or at least phone numbers for companies that produce paint programs. Calling
them and asking if they have such, and for recommendations if they don't, is
how I'd tackle it.
Good Luck,
<mike
|
3772.7 | PhotoLab | TLE::RMEYERS | Randy Meyers | Thu Jun 21 1990 18:17 | 7 |
| Re: .5
I think that Deluxe PhotoLab from Electronic Arts came with a program
called "poster" that does exactly what you described. (Deluxe PhotoLab
is (was?) EA's entry to the HAM paint program wars.)
Perhaps someone that owns Deluxe PhotoLab can confirm or deny this.
|
3772.8 | PhotoLab comes with Posters | RIPPLE::LUKE_TE | | Thu Jun 21 1990 18:59 | 16 |
| Yes, Deluxe PhotoLab does come with the poster program. It brings
up a grid that represents pages and you drag a box to the size which
covers how many pages wide and long you want your picture to print
out. I then prints out each individual piece on a page and you
paste them together.
I saw an ad in the lastest Amiga World that gives you Deluxe PhotoLab
for free if you buy Deluxe Video III. Sounds like a deal! I don't
think it's a big seller. Other than poster, it allows creating
pictures that are any number of pixels wide and long -up to the
limits of your fast memory. For example, you can create a picture
that is 3000 x 200 and print it out sideways and you have a banner.
I use it with Kara fonts to make fantastic banners. As a general
paint package, however, it doesn't have anywhere near the painting
features or speed of most of the other packages.
|
3772.9 | Too many disks spoil the cloth! | SNOC01::RODDY | | Sun Jun 24 1990 22:50 | 15 |
|
Thanks Mike,
As I implied previously, it's a simple concept but no one seems
to have brought together all those little hacks to make it work.
Perhaps there just isn't the demand for such a product. I can't
imagine my wife switching between several products just to print
out one pattern - she has trouble remembering which way to insert
the disks :-).
Ah well, looks like I'll have to really get stuck into this 'C'
stuff - are there any Amigas out there controlling sewing machines?
Thanks again.
Regards, Phil.
|
3772.10 | Just getting my replies in order | SNOC01::RODDY | | Sun Jun 24 1990 23:15 | 12 |
|
Re .9
Woops! - looks like my 'next unseen' is reading the replies in
the wrong order (sorry).
The Photolab looks like the closest thing so far - would be nice
if it could do scaling in "Human" sizes though.
(I wonder if I can buy it thru my company before end on tax year?:-)
Thanks to all.
Regards, Phil.
|