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Post by wisdomknight on Nov 23, 2013 13:38:21 GMT -9
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Post by squirmydad on Nov 23, 2013 18:11:12 GMT -9
No, sorry.
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Post by wisdomknight on Nov 23, 2013 19:28:03 GMT -9
np squirmydad
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Post by WackyAnne on Nov 23, 2013 21:18:24 GMT -9
That reminds me, does the cutter need to see all the cut-lines, or just be able to read the registration lines? If you were just trying to cut a shape out of a plain piece of paper, I'm guessing you'd just have to make sure the paper wasn't wonky enough to jam?
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Post by Sirrob01 on Nov 24, 2013 2:30:37 GMT -9
That reminds me, does the cutter need to see all the cut-lines, or just be able to read the registration lines? If you were just trying to cut a shape out of a plain piece of paper, I'm guessing you'd just have to make sure the paper wasn't wonky enough to jam? Yep if your cutting plain shapes (they can get pretty intricate check out some of those scrapbooking templates) you just run a blank piece of paper in, no reg marks needed.
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Post by pblade on Nov 28, 2013 18:59:51 GMT -9
As Sirrob says, if all you are doing is cutting a shape you don't need any registration marks. Just make sure the shape(s) fit in the cut area. If you want to see *really* intricate stuff, check out the snowflakes in Silhouette's store. I've got one that my old laptop can't completely process.
- Pb
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