So nice to see you post! So lovely, wow... looks like an African pattern, which I LOVE. One thing I learned the other day by wanting to submit my fabric pattern was the website would not accept the quality of my pattern. 300 resolution and all the 9 yard but NO. I figured, in order to submit high level of jpeg, which the site wanted, instead of saving my pattern in 'Export', I had to save as 'Save as' pattern jpeg file. That increased the quality of my file. Not sure if you ever dealt with such scenario, but in all these years, and I could see the quality truly increase was due to my short coming in saving (supposedly) on high resolution jpeg. Png was not recommended due to some technical issues for fabric, so it had to be jpeg. Normally, I would save my work for designer paper print first as transparent .tiff file, then .pdf to print cleanly, but not when it came to fabric. Do you know anything about that? (scratches head ... like seriously , there is no end to figuring). EDIT: I was a little ahead of myself watching your video, and I see you did the same by saving the template as 'Save as' jpeg. What the fabric people want. Can you please, just whole new heading, add 'Fabric' to your Photoshop tutorials, because it would make even more sense. Especially, for people who are looking into designing fabrics. Gosh... I have seen Expo's in Europe only for fabrics... like Italian designs and amazing designs. I think that is part where my heart is ... from the fashion industry, to bedding, amazing inspiration. The paper crafters people would need a source of inspiration that stays. Not only like creating cards, but creating designs that are used in longevity. Sorry for my banter 😻
Yeah the whole process of saving can be confusing I have had to learn some hard lessons too. As you start to learn how to make patterns you realize patterns are everywhere. I first got into this as a digital scrapbooker and then wanting to create my own digital paper, but the world of pattern design is so much bigger!!
So nice to see you post!
So lovely, wow... looks like an African pattern, which I LOVE. One thing I learned the other day by wanting to submit my fabric pattern was the website would not accept the quality of my pattern. 300 resolution and all the 9 yard but NO. I figured, in order to submit high level of jpeg, which the site wanted, instead of saving my pattern in 'Export', I had to save as 'Save as' pattern jpeg file. That increased the quality of my file.
Not sure if you ever dealt with such scenario, but in all these years, and I could see the quality truly increase was due to my short coming in saving (supposedly) on high resolution jpeg. Png was not recommended due to some technical issues for fabric, so it had to be jpeg. Normally, I would save my work for designer paper print first as transparent .tiff file, then .pdf to print cleanly, but not when it came to fabric.
Do you know anything about that? (scratches head ... like seriously , there is no end to figuring).
EDIT: I was a little ahead of myself watching your video, and I see you did the same by saving the template as 'Save as' jpeg. What the fabric people want.
Can you please, just whole new heading, add 'Fabric' to your Photoshop tutorials, because it would make even more sense. Especially, for people who are looking into designing fabrics. Gosh... I have seen Expo's in Europe only for fabrics... like Italian designs and amazing designs. I think that is part where my heart is ... from the fashion industry, to bedding, amazing inspiration. The paper crafters people would need a source of inspiration that stays. Not only like creating cards, but creating designs that are used in longevity.
Sorry for my banter 😻
Yeah the whole process of saving can be confusing I have had to learn some hard lessons too. As you start to learn how to make patterns you realize patterns are everywhere. I first got into this as a digital scrapbooker and then wanting to create my own digital paper, but the world of pattern design is so much bigger!!
@@LemonPaperLab 💖💖💖