Object files are composed of shapes that have stitches applied to them. You can do basic things similar to an embroidery customizing program: mirror, rotate, resize, skew. But you can’t just click on the nose or the eye because they aren’t discrete objects. It’s pretty much one big blob of lots of colored pixels. Imagine you’ve taken a photo of your cat and you want to modify it. Stitch files can be likened to bitmap graphics, which are a collection of little colored blocks called pixels. Other programs will instead just separate the design by colors, even if that color is composed of multiple “units.” (Embrilliance works this way.) This can be less confusing to work with, especially with basic customizing. Only you can decide which one is best for how you work.īut first, we need to understand the difference between stitch files and object files. Hatch and Embrilliance handle fonts very differently and of course, each one does something the other can’t.
One question I get asked a lot is about fonts.
Instead, I’ll modify my designs in the program where they were created. However, if you purchase designs, it’s rare to get a true stitch file and even if you can, you must have the software it was created with to even open it. Note: Because I’m a digitizer and generally only work with designs I create, I seldom actually work with stitch files. Generally, I like Embrilliance better for editing stitch files and Hatch for digitizing. Well, the answer is each one has something it does better than the other and if you’re serious about embroidery, you may need both! Because I use both Hatch and Embrilliance, I often get questions along the lines of “which one is best?” Recently that question has popped up about fonts so here’s what you need to know!