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Permanent Patterns?


new2woodwrk

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I have about 500  patterns  to make  a perminate pattern of each would take the rest of my life, I am 80 It is so easy to take a copy and spray glue it on wood and then remove it with meneral sperits. I do have one permanate  pattern and it is of a oven pull which I give away to women when they buy somethinf at the craft shows.

IKE

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My 88 year old Uncle-in-law, who inspired me to start scrolling, always makes a permanent pattern.  I believe part of the reason is the computer and printer perplex him at times but mostly it is out of habit.  He also taught me to use a “story stick” for my cabinet making projects.  He is a master carpenter and at 88 a bit set in his ways which is good with me.  I am using paper patterns except for one project set that I have been asked to make many copies and therefore a traceable hard pattern makes sense. I use 1/8 inch stock for these patterns. 

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23 minutes ago, dgman said:

I would have to have boxes and boxes full of templates if I did it that way. Not to mention the time it would take to make a template before cutting the project.

Depending on how thick of wood you cut but a template could be added ( stack cut ) so after the first cut you have your template for the next time you cut..

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I think templates are a viable alternative to re-printed paper patterns....in come limited circumstances.  For example, simple silhouettes & shapes can be re-produced faster by tracing around a template, but beyond that, for more detailed work, I think using a paper pattern will give you better, more accurate and consistent results.

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18 hours ago, Bill WIlson said:

I think templates are a viable alternative to re-printed paper patterns....in come limited circumstances.  For example, simple silhouettes & shapes can be re-produced faster by tracing around a template, but beyond that, for more detailed work, I think using a paper pattern will give you better, more accurate and consistent results.

Bill has a good point permanent patterns or templates work well for really simple designs.

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Here is a case in point.  I cut this Sue Mey design.  She has a number of overlays (love, joy, peace, faith, hope, Jesus, etc).  Since I was doing 24 crosses in total and I was using 3/4" stock for the backer stack cutting was out of the questions.  So I put the pattern one time on a piece of 1/8" hardboard, cut it out and used it to trace out all my crosses.  The 1/8" template is hanging on my shop wall with other similar templates for future use. 

NW3385.png

 

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Well now that I think about it I do use a template.. My bases for my clocks and other things I made templates for.. Though most are not scroll sawn.. I pretty much cut the bases on the table saw or bandsaw and then use the template to mark the rounded corners.. Typically use the disc sander to get the corners rounded off and then finish smoothing them with the hand sander... and i would do this with silhouette stuff if I was doing a lot of it..  

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On 1/11/2020 at 8:05 PM, kmmcrafts said:

I'll stick to computer files to print on paper.. with ability to modify, resize, personalize etc etc etc... Not very practical for what i do.... I could see this for certain type of projects..but not for the things I make..

The first thing I do with a new project is what ever it takes to get it into SVG format in the computer. Using Inkscape I can print patterns any size I want with sharp clear lines.

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