What format your machine sews (see your manual or the list below).□ WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOWįor the bare bones basics, you need to know: If you purchase something through one of those links I may receive a small commission, which helps to offset the cost of running this site. Lindee G Embroidery is also an affiliate for, Nancy’s Notions, Embrilliance, and Craftsy. It doesn’t cost you anything extra and I only recommend things that I’ve tried and tested, so please, please, please… use my links.įine Print: Lindee G Embroidery is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to. What that means is that if you click one of them and buy something… I get a commission. Just to let you know that some of the links on this site are affiliate links. I usually just save in DST because I know it will work on all my machines. When you’re ready to sew a design you’ve made or modified, simply save it out in your machine’s preferred format. Even though no machine can sew this format, you still want to keep it because it has special, magical properties (all native files do). BE is the working file format for Embrilliance and Embroidery Works. On the subject of “native files,” it’s important to understand that many programs have a “working” file format and another one that is used by the machine.įor example. Today’s machines and embroidery programs are more “multi-lingual” and can read many formats in addition to their native format. In the past, home embroidery software often only recognized their own preferred format embroidery machines the same. (They were there previously, we just didn’t see them.) To read them, we say “dot PDF” (naming out each letter) or just “PDF.” Not normally in use on Macintosh prior to OS X but now we Mac users have extensions too. Windows programs may not read a file without an extension. Do all those file extensions seem like some crazy alphabet soup? What do they mean? How do they work? What the heck are they anyway?įile extensions are those characters (usually 3) following the period (“dot”) at the end of a file name which designate which programs can read the file.
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