I finally got enough time to start assembling and organizing the different embroidery files that I have. I have created 2 file sets, MLP Eyes, and MLP Cutie Marks, each for $35. Included with each is all the different designs for cutie marks and MLP eyes that I have created.
New or updated designs will be sent out when I create and organize them, free of charge, so you never have to worry about your set going out of date.
I will also be making a set for putting pony designs themselves on clothes, towels, and the like, but that will take longer to put together than this set. Those will take much more modification and work to be ready.
The sets are available here.
Showing posts with label cutie mark. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cutie mark. Show all posts
Sunday, July 8, 2012
Friday, June 8, 2012
My Little Pony eye and Cutie Mark size
I get asked quite a bit what the correct eye and cutie mark size is for MLP stuffed animals. There are honestly a ton of personal preferences and patterns, but in general, these are the sizes that I think work best. They have been tweeked over the past year based on feedback from different designers and makers.
Height is measured from the bottom of the hoof to the top of the head, not including the mane or ears. The size of the cutie mark and eyes is measured by width or height of the design, whichever is hit first when sizing. For example, for a 18" tall pony, the eye should fit in a square that is 101mm in width and height. In general, I round to the nearest 5mm size when I embroider. So an 18" tall pony would get an eye that is 100mm by 100mm.
Height is measured from the bottom of the hoof to the top of the head, not including the mane or ears. The size of the cutie mark and eyes is measured by width or height of the design, whichever is hit first when sizing. For example, for a 18" tall pony, the eye should fit in a square that is 101mm in width and height. In general, I round to the nearest 5mm size when I embroider. So an 18" tall pony would get an eye that is 100mm by 100mm.
Height in inches | Height in milimeters | eye size in mm | cutie mark in mm | |
1 | 25 | 6 | 6 | |
2 | 51 | 11 | 13 | |
3 | 76 | 17 | 19 | |
4 | 102 | 22 | 25 | |
5 | 127 | 28 | 32 | |
6 | 152 | 34 | 38 | |
7 | 178 | 39 | 45 | |
8 | 203 | 45 | 51 | |
9 | 229 | 50 | 57 | |
10 | 254 | 56 | 64 | |
11 | 279 | 62 | 70 | |
12 | 305 | 67 | 76 | |
13 | 330 | 73 | 83 | |
14 | 356 | 78 | 89 | |
15 | 381 | 84 | 95 | |
16 | 406 | 89 | 102 | |
17 | 432 | 95 | 108 | |
18 | 457 | 101 | 114 | |
19 | 483 | 106 | 121 | |
20 | 508 | 112 | 127 | |
21 | 533 | 117 | 133 | |
22 | 559 | 123 | 140 | |
23 | 584 | 129 | 146 | |
24 | 610 | 134 | 152 | |
25 | 635 | 140 | 159 | |
26 | 660 | 145 | 165 | |
27 | 686 | 151 | 172 | |
28 | 711 | 157 | 178 | |
29 | 737 | 162 | 184 | |
30 | 762 | 168 | 191 | |
31 | 787 | 173 | 197 | |
32 | 813 | 179 | 203 | |
33 | 838 | 184 | 210 | |
34 | 864 | 190 | 216 | |
35 | 889 | 196 | 222 | |
36 | 914 | 201 | 229 | |
37 | 940 | 207 | 235 | |
38 | 965 | 212 | 241 | |
39 | 991 | 218 | 248 | |
40 | 1016 | 224 | 254 | |
41 | 1041 | 229 | 260 | |
42 | 1067 | 235 | 267 | |
43 | 1092 | 240 | 273 | |
44 | 1118 | 246 | 279 | |
45 | 1143 | 252 | 286 | |
46 | 1168 | 257 | 292 | |
47 | 1194 | 263 | 299 | |
48 | 1219 | 268 | 305 |
Friday, May 4, 2012
Lyra Plushie Kit - Make your own Plushie
Kit is available here: ethepony.ecrater.com
I have gotten a ton of requests to embroider eyes and cutie marks for folks who want a MLP plushie. Sadly, a lot of the detail on embroidering eyes and cutie marks is lost when I try to make a patch out of them. The only option while keeping quality is to embroider directly on the fabric. If you didn’t have an embroidery machine, that meant sending me the fabric, I would embroider it, and then mail it back. That back and forth took about a month, and shipping cost was very high. I have been working on different solutions with a few goals in mind. The goals I had in mind were:
Realistic - The solution had to look like a MLP pony and be 'On Model'. They definitely had to be better than the new TRU plushes that frighten small children.
High quality - The solution had to be high quality. Quality is in the details, so the details have to be wonderfully made.
Huggable - The solution had to be cuddly and soft.
Durable - The solution had to be able to take abuse and rough play. Kids (and sometimes adults) are rough with their toys.
Inexpensive - The solution had to be easy to afford so that everyone can make MLP plushies. My specific goal was under $50 total.
Fast - Turn around time of less than a week so that folks don't have to wait.
Easy - the solution had to be as easy as possible for the buyer. Preferably a ‘one stop shop’
Pretty much everything I came up with failed several of those requirements, especially the inexpensive one. Shipping fabric around several times is not the best use of money. Then, about 2 weeks ago I was in a fabric store that I had not been to before. I was just wondering around when I came across a few bolts of high quality polar fleece. I stared at one of them for a while before I figured out why it had caught my attention. It was Lyra’s body color. That color is insanely hard to find, and here was 20 square yards that I ran across on accident. That fleece had to come home with me, and the idea was born. A MLP Plushie Kit.
My goal was to be under $50 for a MLP plushie, so I sat down and figured out just what materials would be needed, how much they would cost, and how to get them to someone for the cheapest way possible. I pared the list down to only those things that are harder to find, and put them all into the kit. When I was done, I ended up with a cost well BELOW my goal; only 38 bucks. Even a pony like Rainbow Dash with a bazillion colors would end up under $50.
The Lyra Plushie Kit is designed to give you nearly everything you need to make a Lyra plushie. The kit comes with huggable soft polar fleece in the right colors that has been embroidered with Lyra’s eyes and cutie marks for a professional look. The embroidery sizing is based upon Valley Violet’s MLP pony pattern, which makes a pony at around ten inches tall. The eyes and cutie marks are each 65mm tall (about 2.5 inches). The embroidery itself is designed to be durable, and is overlocked at several points. This means that if something happens and some of the thread is cut (say, on a ceiling fan as you toss Lyra across the room) the embroidery won’t completely unravel. The black and tan grid that can be seen in the pictures are each one inch squares for reference by the way.
The main body of Lyra is made from mint polar fleece, and pieces of medium green and white polar fleece are supplied to make Lyra’s mane and tail. Polar fleece is soft, warm, and doesn't shed little bits all over like Minky or other microfiber fleece. This makes it a good fit for a plushie that will get hugged, and not necessary put in a display case on a shelf.
2 bobbins of thread that contain about 120 yards of thread each are also included so you can sew your plush together. 120 yards is enough for about 5 plushies, so you can test to your heart’s content. The thread is 40 weight polyester and is color matched to the mint fleece. As all seams are sewn inside the body and none is visible, the color isn’t all that important for most of the plush. The exception is the hand sewing required on the plush’s head. The thread comes on 2 bobbins, one is size L, one is size 15. This is equivalent to Brother SA155 and SA156 bobbins. About 99% of home machines use one of these 2 bobbin sizes. That means you can use one bobbin as a bobbin, and the other bobbin for the top thread. Most machines have a vertical feed that will take a bobbin for the top thread. In some cases, a spool pin or something like it may be supplied with the machine to support a vertical feed from a bobbin. Check your machine manual to see if it supports this type of feed. Do not use a bobbin for the top thread on a horizontal fed machine, and do not use it if your machine recommends against it. I have never had a problem with it on any sewing machine, but you know your machine best.
What you get:
Mint Polar Fleece - 58” wide by 12” tall, and embroidered
Medium Green Polar Fleece - 29” wide by 12” tall
White Polar Fleece - 29” wide by 12” tall
One class 15 bobbin with 120 yards of mint thread
One class L bobbin with 120 yards of mint thread
What you don’t get, but will need:
Sewing Machine (or lots of patience)
Marker
hand needle
Pins
Polyfill – Nearly every Wal-Mart caries this
Pony Pattern
http://valleyviolet.deviantart.com/
http://www.etsy.com/shop/valleyviolet
Or nearly any pattern where the end result is a pony roughly 10 inches tall.
The fabric is huggable soft polar fleece. The mint fleece (Lyra’s body) is 58 inches wide by 12 inches tall. For Lyra’s mane and tail, one piece of medium green and one piece of white is supplied, each at 12” tall by 29” wide. The sizes I have listed here are approximate, and may be plus or minus several inches. There is almost twice as much material as needed to make a Lyra plushie so you have lots of testing material.
Valley Violet’s MLP pony pattern is pretty popular, and there are lots of modifications to it that folks have done. One common modification is making the pony sides from 1 piece of fabric instead of two. The embroidered cutie mark locations support either one or two piece pony sides.
Hints:
The cutie marks and eyes are directional. This means there is a left and a right for both. When you cut them out, make sure you cut them out on the correct side. Measure twice cut once!
Make sure to sew the ‘wrong side’ together. When you make a plush, you sew it inside out then turn it right side out at the end. That means the embroidery will be on the INSIDE of the pony when you are actually sewing it.
I suggest not using the embroidered pieces for your first pony. Getting the eye placement just right can be time consuming. If the eyes are not lined up, your pony may look weird. Well, with the exception of Derpy. Pinning the pattern to the fleece then holding it up to a strong light can help you see how the embroidery lays out against the pattern. Once cut, it is all but impossible to fix, so take your time.
Tested with sewing machine needle sizes 11, 12 and 14.
I have gotten a ton of requests to embroider eyes and cutie marks for folks who want a MLP plushie. Sadly, a lot of the detail on embroidering eyes and cutie marks is lost when I try to make a patch out of them. The only option while keeping quality is to embroider directly on the fabric. If you didn’t have an embroidery machine, that meant sending me the fabric, I would embroider it, and then mail it back. That back and forth took about a month, and shipping cost was very high. I have been working on different solutions with a few goals in mind. The goals I had in mind were:
Realistic - The solution had to look like a MLP pony and be 'On Model'. They definitely had to be better than the new TRU plushes that frighten small children.
High quality - The solution had to be high quality. Quality is in the details, so the details have to be wonderfully made.
Huggable - The solution had to be cuddly and soft.
Durable - The solution had to be able to take abuse and rough play. Kids (and sometimes adults) are rough with their toys.
Inexpensive - The solution had to be easy to afford so that everyone can make MLP plushies. My specific goal was under $50 total.
Fast - Turn around time of less than a week so that folks don't have to wait.
Easy - the solution had to be as easy as possible for the buyer. Preferably a ‘one stop shop’
Pretty much everything I came up with failed several of those requirements, especially the inexpensive one. Shipping fabric around several times is not the best use of money. Then, about 2 weeks ago I was in a fabric store that I had not been to before. I was just wondering around when I came across a few bolts of high quality polar fleece. I stared at one of them for a while before I figured out why it had caught my attention. It was Lyra’s body color. That color is insanely hard to find, and here was 20 square yards that I ran across on accident. That fleece had to come home with me, and the idea was born. A MLP Plushie Kit.
My goal was to be under $50 for a MLP plushie, so I sat down and figured out just what materials would be needed, how much they would cost, and how to get them to someone for the cheapest way possible. I pared the list down to only those things that are harder to find, and put them all into the kit. When I was done, I ended up with a cost well BELOW my goal; only 38 bucks. Even a pony like Rainbow Dash with a bazillion colors would end up under $50.
The Lyra Plushie Kit is designed to give you nearly everything you need to make a Lyra plushie. The kit comes with huggable soft polar fleece in the right colors that has been embroidered with Lyra’s eyes and cutie marks for a professional look. The embroidery sizing is based upon Valley Violet’s MLP pony pattern, which makes a pony at around ten inches tall. The eyes and cutie marks are each 65mm tall (about 2.5 inches). The embroidery itself is designed to be durable, and is overlocked at several points. This means that if something happens and some of the thread is cut (say, on a ceiling fan as you toss Lyra across the room) the embroidery won’t completely unravel. The black and tan grid that can be seen in the pictures are each one inch squares for reference by the way.
The main body of Lyra is made from mint polar fleece, and pieces of medium green and white polar fleece are supplied to make Lyra’s mane and tail. Polar fleece is soft, warm, and doesn't shed little bits all over like Minky or other microfiber fleece. This makes it a good fit for a plushie that will get hugged, and not necessary put in a display case on a shelf.
2 bobbins of thread that contain about 120 yards of thread each are also included so you can sew your plush together. 120 yards is enough for about 5 plushies, so you can test to your heart’s content. The thread is 40 weight polyester and is color matched to the mint fleece. As all seams are sewn inside the body and none is visible, the color isn’t all that important for most of the plush. The exception is the hand sewing required on the plush’s head. The thread comes on 2 bobbins, one is size L, one is size 15. This is equivalent to Brother SA155 and SA156 bobbins. About 99% of home machines use one of these 2 bobbin sizes. That means you can use one bobbin as a bobbin, and the other bobbin for the top thread. Most machines have a vertical feed that will take a bobbin for the top thread. In some cases, a spool pin or something like it may be supplied with the machine to support a vertical feed from a bobbin. Check your machine manual to see if it supports this type of feed. Do not use a bobbin for the top thread on a horizontal fed machine, and do not use it if your machine recommends against it. I have never had a problem with it on any sewing machine, but you know your machine best.
What you get:
Mint Polar Fleece - 58” wide by 12” tall, and embroidered
Medium Green Polar Fleece - 29” wide by 12” tall
White Polar Fleece - 29” wide by 12” tall
One class 15 bobbin with 120 yards of mint thread
One class L bobbin with 120 yards of mint thread
What you don’t get, but will need:
Sewing Machine (or lots of patience)
Marker
hand needle
Pins
Polyfill – Nearly every Wal-Mart caries this
Pony Pattern
http://valleyviolet.deviantart.com/
http://www.etsy.com/shop/valleyviolet
Or nearly any pattern where the end result is a pony roughly 10 inches tall.
The fabric is huggable soft polar fleece. The mint fleece (Lyra’s body) is 58 inches wide by 12 inches tall. For Lyra’s mane and tail, one piece of medium green and one piece of white is supplied, each at 12” tall by 29” wide. The sizes I have listed here are approximate, and may be plus or minus several inches. There is almost twice as much material as needed to make a Lyra plushie so you have lots of testing material.
Valley Violet’s MLP pony pattern is pretty popular, and there are lots of modifications to it that folks have done. One common modification is making the pony sides from 1 piece of fabric instead of two. The embroidered cutie mark locations support either one or two piece pony sides.
Hints:
The cutie marks and eyes are directional. This means there is a left and a right for both. When you cut them out, make sure you cut them out on the correct side. Measure twice cut once!
Make sure to sew the ‘wrong side’ together. When you make a plush, you sew it inside out then turn it right side out at the end. That means the embroidery will be on the INSIDE of the pony when you are actually sewing it.
I suggest not using the embroidered pieces for your first pony. Getting the eye placement just right can be time consuming. If the eyes are not lined up, your pony may look weird. Well, with the exception of Derpy. Pinning the pattern to the fleece then holding it up to a strong light can help you see how the embroidery lays out against the pattern. Once cut, it is all but impossible to fix, so take your time.
Tested with sewing machine needle sizes 11, 12 and 14.
Friday, August 19, 2011
Luna Cutie Mark Embroidery Design
Someone requested 6 different embroidered MLP:FiM shirts embroidered with different cutie marks right before I was injured. I already had designs for 5 of them, but I didn't have one for Luna. Luna's cutie mark will not really work as it is in the show due to the shape, so I modified it slightly to look good from pretty much any angle. The design is actually based on a Luna cutie mark pin by PinFilly. (Who makes awesome metal MLP:FiM pins for only a few bucks)
You can download the embroidery file here.
Colors:
Dark purple - 2209 (background)
white - 2149 (moon)
![]() |
Patch version, which looks identical to the regular version. |
Colors:
Dark purple - 2209 (background)
white - 2149 (moon)
Friday, August 5, 2011
20% Cooler Embroidery Design
Here's a design of Rainbow Dash's cutie mark and the text 20% cooler in a stencil font. This was requested by one of the winners of the 'Draw E' contest. I really like the design compared to Rainbow Dash's cutie mark by itself.
colors (nice and simple):
White
Red
Yellow
Blue
Download the file Here
colors (nice and simple):
White
Red
Yellow
Blue
Download the file Here
Tuesday, July 26, 2011
Patches and other Stuff
For those of you wondering why I haven't been posting, it is because I have been working on trying to do something that my embroidery machine isn't made for. I got a bunch of requests to make patches or something like it, and have been screwing around trying to make it happen.
Well, after a lot of testing, broken needles, and 1 broken machine , I figured out how to make patches without breaking anything. I also found out that Amazon stocks my machine, so I was able to buy a replacement and have it overnighted. Go amazon.
When I made the first one, (Rarity's cutie mark by the way) I couldn't believe how well it came out. I have been trying other designs, and the above Cutie Mark Crusaders patch was asked about a few days ago and I just finished it. Looks pretty good if I do say so myself.
The bad thing about these designs is that there is a very high possibility that a normal embroidery needle will break due to the sheer amount of thread involved. Generally, the maximum amount of thread layers that an embroidery machine would sew though is 3. More than that, and you risk breaking needles or other funkyness like skipping stitches. These require 2 or 3 times the normal amount of stabilizer, and there are extra layers of thread in the design to hold it together for durability. In some cases, up to 7 layers. These are almost an 1/8th of an inch thick. Normal for a patch, but not for a home embroidery machine. After I broke about 20 needles, I finally figured out I needed a special type of embroidery needle with a special shape, low deflection, and super strength. It's basically a commercial needle that is machined to fit a home embroidery machine.
Once made, there is also a good amount of cleanup that needs to happen (cutting out the design, and making sure the edges don't unravel). Some of it is pretty dangerous compared to simple embroidery. Due to those 2 factors (breaking needles and dangerous fun) I won't be releasing the designs, at least for now. They are well outside what a home embroidery machine is made to do, and I don't want to break someone's machine (or worse, fling a broken needle across a room) and get sued or something by someone who doesn't understand what they are doing.
But they are pretty cool aren't they?
Well, after a lot of testing, broken needles, and 1 broken machine , I figured out how to make patches without breaking anything. I also found out that Amazon stocks my machine, so I was able to buy a replacement and have it overnighted. Go amazon.
When I made the first one, (Rarity's cutie mark by the way) I couldn't believe how well it came out. I have been trying other designs, and the above Cutie Mark Crusaders patch was asked about a few days ago and I just finished it. Looks pretty good if I do say so myself.
The bad thing about these designs is that there is a very high possibility that a normal embroidery needle will break due to the sheer amount of thread involved. Generally, the maximum amount of thread layers that an embroidery machine would sew though is 3. More than that, and you risk breaking needles or other funkyness like skipping stitches. These require 2 or 3 times the normal amount of stabilizer, and there are extra layers of thread in the design to hold it together for durability. In some cases, up to 7 layers. These are almost an 1/8th of an inch thick. Normal for a patch, but not for a home embroidery machine. After I broke about 20 needles, I finally figured out I needed a special type of embroidery needle with a special shape, low deflection, and super strength. It's basically a commercial needle that is machined to fit a home embroidery machine.
Once made, there is also a good amount of cleanup that needs to happen (cutting out the design, and making sure the edges don't unravel). Some of it is pretty dangerous compared to simple embroidery. Due to those 2 factors (breaking needles and dangerous fun) I won't be releasing the designs, at least for now. They are well outside what a home embroidery machine is made to do, and I don't want to break someone's machine (or worse, fling a broken needle across a room) and get sued or something by someone who doesn't understand what they are doing.
But they are pretty cool aren't they?
Friday, July 8, 2011
Spitfire's Cutie Mark
Here's a design of Spitfire's cutie mark. I'm pretty sure this cutie mark is cannon, as I haven't seen a screenshot of spitfire with her cutie mark visible. But here you go anyway :)
You can download the embroidery file here.
Colors are simple for once:
Yellow
Orange
Red
You can download the embroidery file here.
Colors are simple for once:
Yellow
Orange
Red
Wednesday, July 6, 2011
Twilight's Cutie Mark
Here's a design of Twilight Sparkle's cutie mark. While I was at it, I embroidered it onto a pillow and a towel. Twilight Sparkle is best pony.
You can download the embroidery file here.
Colors:
White - 2149
Magenta - 2041
You can download the embroidery file here.
Colors:
White - 2149
Magenta - 2041
Tuesday, July 5, 2011
Rarity's Cutie Mark
Here's an embroidery design on Rarity's cutie mark. Another nice simple design that didn't take a boatload of time.
You can download the Embroidery file here.
You can download the Embroidery file here.
Sunday, July 3, 2011
Pokey Pierce Cutie Mark
The mortal enemy of Pinkie Pie has arrived. Here's a quick design of Pokey Pierce's Cutie Mark. This one took longer to sew than it did to make, which is a nice change of pace.
You can download the design here.
Colors:
Light gray - 2138 (Pin)
Light Blue - 2203 (pin head)
Magenta - 2041 (Heart)
Pastel blue- 2143 (Pin head reflection)
You can download the design here.
Colors:
Light gray - 2138 (Pin)
Light Blue - 2203 (pin head)
Magenta - 2041 (Heart)
Pastel blue- 2143 (Pin head reflection)
Thursday, June 9, 2011
Fluttershy's Cutie Mark in Embroidery
Next on the list of the main 6 is Fluttershy's cutie mark. The only annoying part on this design was getting the antenna's of the butterfly's just right.
Here is a version on some scrap fleece, the rendered version, and a pic of the design on a fluffy towel.
You can download the embroidery file here.
Colors:
Pink - 2179 (wings of butterfly)
Light Blue - 2233 (body of butterfly)
Here is a version on some scrap fleece, the rendered version, and a pic of the design on a fluffy towel.
You can download the embroidery file here.
Colors:
Pink - 2179 (wings of butterfly)
Light Blue - 2233 (body of butterfly)
Tuesday, June 7, 2011
Cherilee's Cutie Mark in Embroidery
With Cherilee, I decided to do 2 designs. One as a full 100mm by 100mm design with one of the 3 portions of the design, and one with all 3 within 100mm by 100mm. That will grant some flexibility on sizing.
You can download both designs here.
You can download both designs here.
Sunday, June 5, 2011
Pinkie Pie's Cuite Mark
Pinkie Pie's cutie mark was a nice change of pace from all the complicated designs I have been doing recently.
You can download it here.
Colors:
Light Yellow - 2017
Light blue - 2198
You can download it here.
Colors:
Light Yellow - 2017
Light blue - 2198
Thursday, June 2, 2011
Big Macintosh's Cutie Mark
Here's a design of Big Mac's cutie mark, as requested. This has about 11,000 stitches, but didn't take long to make as the design is relatively simplistic compared to other designs. It's made for a 100 by 100mm hoop. Again, the render doesn't do this design justice; the example is on a hand towel.
Make your own stuff with the embroidery file.
Colors:
Lemon Yellow - 2002 (stem)
Lime green - 2015 (apple)
Pea green - 2241 (apple core)
Forest Green - 2109 (leaf vein and center core)
Burnt Brown - 2129 (apple seeds)
Make your own stuff with the embroidery file.
Colors:
Lemon Yellow - 2002 (stem)
Lime green - 2015 (apple)
Pea green - 2241 (apple core)
Forest Green - 2109 (leaf vein and center core)
Burnt Brown - 2129 (apple seeds)
Friday, May 27, 2011
Celestia's Cutie Mark
A brony asked for Celestia's cutie mark. Personally, I think Luna needs more love than Trollestia, but I got my original idea to do these embroidery designs during the 'Cutie Mark Chronicles' episode with the outline of Celestia over the sun. So continuing on in the list of Cutie Marks is Princess Celestia's cutie mark in 100mm by 100mm, 3 colors.
Colors:
Burnt orange - 2007 (outside)
Orange - 2022 (middle ring)
yellow - 2005 (center)
If you want to become a princess, you will need to download the design.
Colors:
Burnt orange - 2007 (outside)
Orange - 2022 (middle ring)
yellow - 2005 (center)
If you want to become a princess, you will need to download the design.
Thursday, May 26, 2011
Cutie Mark Crusaders Patch
Not exactly a cutie mark, but for the cutie mark crusaders, this is as close as you can get. Design is 100mm by 100mm in 3 colors and about 17,000 stitches.
Sweetie Belle will soon download it and make a glue on patch. I can just see it now.
Sweetie Belle will soon download it and make a glue on patch. I can just see it now.
Monday, May 23, 2011
Rainbow Dash Cutie Mark Version 2
Here is an updated design for Rainbow Dash's cutie mark. The cloud is made of paint spatters, and turned out quite a bit better than I expected. The design is based upon a graphic on ponychan, which appears to be from a fan t-shirt site here. Here's the design for a 100mm by 100mm hoop.
Download Link is here.
Download Link is here.
Friday, May 20, 2011
Rainbow Dash's Cutie Mark
Today, we have a 2 for 1 special on Rainbow Dash's cutie mark. As usual, these are for Brother machines with a hoop size of at least 100mm by 100mm. So far, these 2 were the easiest to make requiring only about 1.5 hours of design time each. The top one would be for the right flank, while the bottom one is (more or less) direction agnostic.
Remember to flip cutie marks depending on view side (left or right) if you want to match the show as close as possible.
Download Link for the embroidery file.
Remember to flip cutie marks depending on view side (left or right) if you want to match the show as close as possible.
Download Link for the embroidery file.
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