Thu, 05 Aug 2021
Unless youâre drawing your own art from scratch, youâre going to have to find an image to convert. If you are drawing your own art, you still need to consider these factors when youâre creating designs.
Iâm not going to cover copyright and trademark in too much detail, other than to say that even though you have to put a lot of work into turning someone elseâs art into an embroidery design, thatâs still someone elseâs art. They may still have copyright in it. If you want to sell designs, you want them to be your own: commission some work-for-hire, pay for a license, or find something thatâs freely licensed.
With that said, Iâm going to use an emojo as my example: Face With Tears Of Joy.
The Apple version is not ideal for digitizing â that shading is going to complicate things a lot. Blending colors is beyond the scope of this tutorial. Simulating it with thread shades is doable, but when it traces out youâre going to end up with something like this. Better to start with something cleaner, at least at first.
This is not to say that only flat-color images work, but some are better than others. Googleâs, for instance, is flat-color features on a shaded face. We might be able to trace the features and just draw the circle fresh in Inkscape.
Microsoftâs version has a nice outline if we wanted to do a patch.
The Twitter emojo is flat colors, plus it has some generous licensing terms.
Twitterâs Twemoji are pretty recognizable, even if you donât use Twitter â because of that license, theyâre used in many other places. Thatâs the one Iâm going with. Onward!