You would approach the cutting speed the same way. If you have an intricate design and a piece of scrap big enough, you could slice the piece of artwork into 4 separate pieces and do a different speed for each and see what works best. Just make sure that you put a different color on each outline so you can turn them off/on as necessary. And, yes, if I were to try cutting cardboard, I would use the same method. This method will work for any substrate that you might use. Some you might get on the first try, others might take 6 or 7 test cuts before you nail it down. Thank you for watching!
Thanks
Thank you! I didn’t realize what the test cut actually did!
How do I turn the test cut off
You shouldn't have to turn it off. It should only do a test cut when you click on the test cut button.
Great video!
for cutting speed is there similar way for testing?
for cardboard cutting are You doing it same way?
You would approach the cutting speed the same way. If you have an intricate design and a piece of scrap big enough, you could slice the piece of artwork into 4 separate pieces and do a different speed for each and see what works best. Just make sure that you put a different color on each outline so you can turn them off/on as necessary.
And, yes, if I were to try cutting cardboard, I would use the same method. This method will work for any substrate that you might use. Some you might get on the first try, others might take 6 or 7 test cuts before you nail it down.
Thank you for watching!