What a awesome video. I hate to admit this but I am a novice at creating 3D models in Carveco. I would love to have a tutorial explaining things like merge high, merge low, add, subtract and replace. All this just confuses me and you make things look so easy. It's a shame I haven't dedicated enough time to learn all these awesome things about Carveco.
Sure I could do that. I will try and do a video on that soon. I am going to be starting another new series called Carveco Essentials where I deep dive each of the tools and the different ways to use them so this might fit right in.
Hope you can help. When I go to inkscape, start using the app and do as you say and export the file as an inkjet svg. It saves it and carveco maker give the same does not recognize it for import. However, it will not import anyway. I try to select all thinking it imported so far out but that option is greyed out. Any thoughts or advice?
Make sure when you are in inkscape that you separate the original picture with the svg after running the vectorization tool. Make sure you have a project open and when importing into carveco it may come in larger than the material and is why you have to zoom out with the mouse wheel to see it. Also you may need to turn the vectors on by pressing the show vectors button. Hope this helps.
Thanks for your feedback! Staying true to oneself is key, even when faced with criticism. I aim to keep my content genuine-accent and all. Embracing our unique qualities enriches what we do. I appreciate your input as it helps me ensure my content stays relatable and thanks for being part of our community conversation
Great info. But I will just say, that the very best bitmap scan capability I have ever seen is in Lightburn. Especially if you intend to use it for CNC or laser.
Thanks for the feedback. Thanks for bringging that up too II like lightburn as well. I was trying to keep this list to free programs but I may do another video on bitmaps on that one too. Photoshop is also a great tool for making those as well.
What a awesome video.
I hate to admit this but I am a novice at creating 3D models in Carveco. I would love to have a tutorial explaining things like merge high, merge low, add, subtract and replace. All this just confuses me and you make things look so easy. It's a shame I haven't dedicated enough time to learn all these awesome things about Carveco.
Sure I could do that. I will try and do a video on that soon. I am going to be starting another new series called Carveco Essentials where I deep dive each of the tools and the different ways to use them so this might fit right in.
I use combination of Microsoft bing & marigold, works well.
Canva looks a good tool, will investigate further
There are a few AI tools on the hugging face website that are worth checking out. Zoedepth is another one I did not cover.
Love the quick reference to "Ken Jennings"!! I was a Jeopardy fan and remember his streak of winning.
Lol yes I am trying to add a little humor to my videos to try and keep them interesting through all the talking. Glad you caught that.
Thankyou for this info. I am excited to try these out!!
Thanks I hope they help!
Hope you can help. When I go to inkscape, start using the app and do as you say and export the file as an inkjet svg. It saves it and carveco maker give the same does not recognize it for import. However, it will not import anyway. I try to select all thinking it imported so far out but that option is greyed out. Any thoughts or advice?
Make sure when you are in inkscape that you separate the original picture with the svg after running the vectorization tool. Make sure you have a project open and when importing into carveco it may come in larger than the material and is why you have to zoom out with the mouse wheel to see it. Also you may need to turn the vectors on by pressing the show vectors button.
Hope this helps.
Thanks, Ill give it a try
@@mikec9066 Anytime. Thanks for watching these and supporting my channel. It is very much appreciated.
You need to find someone to narrate who doesn't sound like he lives in a trailer court in backwoods Louisiana. Maybe an "aay-eye"?
Thanks for your feedback! Staying true to oneself is key, even when faced with criticism. I aim to keep my content genuine-accent and all. Embracing our unique qualities enriches what we do. I appreciate your input as it helps me ensure my content stays relatable and thanks for being part of our community conversation
What an awful human being you are. Be better.
This is NOT AI. You are working a program, nothing else.
These programs use AI algorithms for some of their functionality but I would agree and add that true AI does not exist. Thanks for the feedback.
Great info. But I will just say, that the very best bitmap scan capability I have ever seen is in Lightburn. Especially if you intend to use it for CNC or laser.
Thanks for the feedback. Thanks for bringging that up too II like lightburn as well. I was trying to keep this list to free programs but I may do another video on bitmaps on that one too. Photoshop is also a great tool for making those as well.