Even with it being from a picture of a hat, that is easy enough to do. Only compensation have to worry about is that it's not a perfectly flat substrate like a shirt that it's a picture of, that's easy enough to compensate for. I used to get a lot of this, having to work off an existing picture of embroidery of all kinds of substrates. This is actually quite "pure" (wait until you get to replicate a design stitched out on high pile substrates and that pile wasn't compensated for, or really any compensation at all was done) and it's a good picture.It's actually going to be that word on hats. Unfortunatly I only have the picture to work off of.
Yeah, that is what I will be doing. Our best one was doing embroidery from a picture of a tatoo.Even with it being from a picture of a hat, that is easy enough to do. Only compensation have to worry about is that it's not a perfectly flat substrate like a shirt that it's a picture of, that's easy enough to compensate for. I used to get a lot of this, having to work off an existing picture of embroidery of all kinds of substrates. This is actually quite "pure" (wait until you get to replicate a design stitched out on high pile substrates and that pile wasn't compensated for, or really any compensation at all was done) and it's a good picture.
I find that easier to do with digitizing software as the tools are more adapt for this type of work compared to traditional vector programs (or atleast the same tools were not as discoverable in vector programs for me compared to embroidery program), but still perfectly doable. But that does depend on what software you have and what level/modules you have.