I have always wanted to use the cute free printables that I
have seen in various places around the internet. I have pinned tons of them on my crafty board
on Pinterest. The problem is, I have the
cutting skills of a kindergartner with closet OCD which would make it
impossible to tolerate the little nicks and such that would be left when I
attempted to cut said printables out. I FINALLY found a solution to easily
cutting out printables in a professional manner.
Earlier this month, Silhouette America introduced the
Pixscan mat for their die cut machines.
While I wasn’t the first in line to order this mat, I was really close
to that and just last week I received my new mat. When I initially ordered the mat, I planned
to use it the way Silhouette marketed it and cut out my stamped images. However, as I played around with cutting out
stamps, I realized that this same technology to cut out many other things, like
printables.
For this experiment, I decided to find travel printables to
help me embellish the pages of the many pictures we took while in Europe this
summer. A quick internet search lead me
to this cute set from Creating Keepsakes.
When I received my mat, I went through the set up procedures
to use my mat. You can find those on
page 35 of the Help manual found inside Silhouette Studio. Because I use an iPhone 5s, I did not have to
go through the complete calibration procedures.
However, should you purchase a mat, there are now a growing number of
tutorials and videos to help you with that process. For this process, I simply
took a picture using my camera phone (shoot straight down on it in even
lighting) and emailed it to myself.
Once you have your image saved to your computer, open
silhouette studio up and open the pixscan tab (3rd tab from the left
at the top). Import the image into
silhouette studio by simply selecting import from file in the pixscan window.
At this point, the file is treated as a standard print and
cut. Follow the basic trace functions to
add cut lines to your image.
Load the pixscan mat into the silhouette and cut as
usual. The machine will automatically
detect the registration marks on the mat and cut out the images traced. I found it better to trace each image separately. For two of these printable images, I tweaked
them until I liked the end cut result by using a standard square shape and an
offset.
Here is a layout that I made using my new
embellishments. I LOVE how my printable
embellishments turned out. I am now
about to start a completely new pin board just for free printables!
Supplies used: Patterned Paper and cardstock die cut-Authentique; Cardstock-Recollections; Printable-Creating Keepsakes; Cutting Machine, cut file and Pixscan Mat-Silhouette America; Veneer-Studio Calico;Bling-Basic Grey.
I hope this short demonstration inspires you to give printable embellishments a try. The add an entirely new dimension to scrapbook embellishments
This is great....thank you! This is exactly how I plan to use it! Consider adding Jessica Sprague's "One Buck Wednesday" to your list. Not free, but a lot of bang for a buck!
ReplyDeleteMy mind is blown! This is so neat. And right up my alley. If my moratorium on new machines ends, this may be one of the first ones I get.
ReplyDeleteGreat idea to find the printables and use them with the PixScan. Very nice layout! I received my mat last week or the week before. Will have to find time to play with it.
ReplyDeleteGreat idea, I need to order a mat and upgrade my software so I can give this a try!
ReplyDeleteAwesome. Great idea. Makes me think just a little bit more about owning one or at least having a friend cut out a few images for me. LOL!
ReplyDeleteRenee thanks for sharing this, I received my mat last week but haven't had a chance to try it out yet...hopefully after my family reunion this weekend I'll have some quiet time to play around. Really like how clean the cuts are and hoping it's as easy as the video looks LOL.
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