Tag: Design

  • New Product Design for my Etsy Business

    New Product Design for my Etsy Business

    When I design a new product for my Etsy business I usually start with an idea that a potential customer has given me. Then we’ll brainstorm out their ideas and see what kind of images would be suitable for creating their piece of costume embroidery.

    I’ll let you into a secret – I can’t draw. No matter how much I’d love to be able to draw I have never managed to master even the basics. So when I am looking to create a design for a client (or for my Etsy store) I go to svg file download sites in order to find images that I can work with.

    The biggest benefit of purchasing svg files to use in my commercial designs is that I know they’re licensed and I can use them to make money without restriction. So many people aren’t aware of copyright laws and just take images from the internet without checking they’re allowed to use them.

    The other major benefit is that you get a fantastic vector image that you can scale to any size and output at any level of quality. It makes them a versatile and worthwhile investment for the future because I have no idea what direction my business will grow in!

    It’s certainly a steep learning curve to understand how to make embroidery design files from vector files that you’ve purchased, but if you do embroidery as a business it’s a skill that is well worth knowing. Getting your designs turned into embroidery files by someone else isn’t hugely expensive, but it does mean that you have to send everything out to another person and wait for them to come back before you can start work on the finished items.

    I have very basic software, the Janome Digitizer JR that came with my machine. But it’s enough to work with raster files that I’ve extracted from my svg file purchases. To turn the SVG file into the kind of image files I can work with in my embroidery software I use Adobe Illustrator, but many of the embroidery design software bundles available now can actually work directly with the SVG files which cuts out that middle step!

    Learning to work with SVG files to create embroidery designs either for business or pleasure can be super enjoyable. You don’t have to be able to draw, you just have to learn how to use the software and then sew the designs up in creative ways!

    And the benefit of digitizing your own designs from SVG files is that, even if you can’t draw, nobody else will have the same embroidery design as you, and everything you make will be unique because of that. Suddenly a standard garment or accessory made from a commercial pattern can become something truly unique that nobody else in the world has!

    But lets face it – even if you can draw, sometimes you don’t want to reinvent the wheel. A quick check online could mean that you save lots of time drawing up designs where someone else has already created something similar and made it available to purchase.

    Happy crafting!

  • Stay up till Four In The Morning…

    Well actually that’s a lie. I work up at four in the morning with inspiration for my sew-along.

    It might be the four seasons of Spartacus I’ve watched over the last few weeks while procrastinating about working my way through my Semester 2 reading list, but Josh Hannah crept his way into my head and promptly prodded me awake. I’ve struggled to find ideas for things to wear to Odyssey, making do with my generic Empire kit last year. But it wasn’t really appropriate. The problem is that I am not a player, I am not a Minoan, but I spend all day in the arena effectively interacting with people. It needs to be easy enough to move in, yet disguise my camera kit, and as gender neutral as possible because I ain’t running around at LRP in girlie clothes. (Sorry girls who like girlie clothes, it’s just not me).

    Enter Batiatus.

    The overall design of his tunic and toga remains the same. It is always a simply cut tunic pulled in at the waist with a narrow leather belt and a toga thrown over his shoulder and tucked into his belt. His father also wears the same. In the gallery there are a few colour variations too, showing simpler designs alongside the blue variation that he mostly wears.

    I don’t know the historical accuracy of the toga, I’d always been brought up to believe that togas were huge lengths of fabric akin to a sari that were draped in particular ways. But it looks pretty cool, so I don’t mind too much. Plus the beau didn’t scowl at me in the same way that he scowled at my beanie at the last event when I showed him, so I can only take that as a good thing.

    And here’s what got put down on paper at 4am after I’d managed to find myself a sketchbook:

    tunic 1

     

    I know, it’s not the most coherent bunch of drawing and writing, but I needed to make sure I remembered it if I got back off to sleep (I didn’t…).

    I’m going to take colour inspiration from the other Minoans who were apparently given the brief ‘autumnal’ and especially Sabrina’s outfit:

    1006051_571399276246021_437556573_n

     

    And oh look, I also found someone else wearing my outfit in different colours…

    1094782_571398819579400_549712329_nSo the first thing to do is to work out some measurements and gave a first go. I’m not imagining it’s going to be rocket science. I have some black Ikea Ditte fabric and some blue of the same, I’ll start there.

    However I also noticed these sneak into the Ikea fabric collection recently:

    Screen Shot 2014-01-24 at 18.13.55 Screen Shot 2014-01-24 at 18.13.43

    MINNA comes in a brown, a dark grey, a mauve and a white. I think I have plans for these. Ikea also does nice linen for £8 a meter…