From Charlie D. - "Some are intimidated by the detail of my patterns"
From Julie F. - "Yes, some patterns have several hundred to even thousand holes. Oh, well. The time you invest will come back to you in the beauty of the piece. I personally love the details in these patterns."
As many of you know I tend to do more 'portraits' than any other projects. I made the jump to spiral blades early on and enjoy the details I am able to bring out in a project. Once I learned the limitations of my earlier saw and acquired the skills I needed to make the project workable I learned that the time and effort required was well spent in doing a project that satisfied ME. I do scrolling as a HOBBY and not as a career or money making endeavor...so I only have to worry about making the piece look good to me. Several times I have reached a point in a project and felt it just wasn't going to work to my satisfaction and just dumped it.
Now getting to the heart of my 'thoughts'...
In another thread Julie F suggested that if the pattern you select looks intimidating, enlarge it until you feel comfortable with it. This is right on and most of the patterns I get are blown up to 130 to 145% so I have to make a trip to the 'copy shop' since I am limited by the size of my printer. We have a networked printer here that will only do up to 8 1/2 X 11 and I am saving my nickels to get a new printer that will do 11 X 17.
Also taking a pattern that is in black & white and converting it to a light color in "Paint.net" makes following the blade much easier! A 2/0 spiral blade against a black background is almost impossible to see no matter how much light you have and is tough even with a magnifier. Hence the enlargement helps greatly.
Details...not every single tiny detail is absolutely essential to make the finished piece look right. I often will run two or even three small details together to get the effect I want. The only place this usually won't work is in the area of "eyes" of either an animal or human, those details are essential. Other times I will just skip over a detail area if I feel it is not necessary to maintain the integrity of the design. It is a judgement call and I suspect that the designer of the pattern would be hard pressed to look at a finished piece and notice that it has been altered slightly.
Mounting the finished piece....most of my portraits are cut, finished sanded and then I will draw a light pencil outline around the outer edge and cut off all the excess. This allows me to mount the piece on a backer of a contrasting or complementary color to really highlight the cutting. The lady at the nearby fabric store thinks I sew since I am in there buying different colors of heavy felt so often.
So, to wrap up this long dissertation, get yourself some spiral blades, a relatively simple portrait pattern and set out with intention to satisfy yourself, take a few deep breaths and RELAX!
No hobby I have ever tried has given me as much pleasure as Scrolling and believe me I have tried many, many other hobbies.
Enjoy!!!
~~~GrayBeard~~~