this post was submitted on 13 Feb 2024
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Cross stitch and embroidery

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Share your stitching and meet new crafty folks! All forms of embroidery and all skill levels welcome 🪡


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Full disclosure before I say anything else, I’m asking this out of personal curiosity and a desire to help friends out but also because I plan on making a video about it so yes it’s kind of a research question too.

Ok. So personally I use Pattern Keeper, and it’s been great. But I find myself wondering what other apps have popped up in the couple of years since I first discovered PK. The other day someone tagged me in a Mastodon question about alternatives, and then a similar convo coincidentally broke out on Discord too, so clearly other people are asking the same question.

Now, I know about a few apps already. Markup R-XP has a devoted following. CrossStitchSaga I apparently need to try because I hear it supports backstitch. And resident app developer @[email protected] posts here regularly with updates on their new contender.

But I thought I’d cast a wider net and see what everyone else is using.

Do you use one of the ones I listed? Do you use another specialised cross stitch app? Do you use something that was originally designed for a totally different purpose but turns out to work great for stitching? Or do you prefer to keep things analog and mark off printed patterns with a pen?

Would love to hear what you like and dislike about your current solution, and I’m hoping to get to test a load of them out and do a proper comparison of them all.

I promise to do a writeup of the conclusions here too so it’s not just stuck in video form!

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[–] [email protected] 2 points 9 months ago (4 children)

My own contribution:

I love Pattern Keeper mostly because it’s very intuitive, I didn’t need to look at any instructions and was able to just install it and use it whereas some others I’ve bounced off because they were a bit more opaque. The symbol search feature is my favourite and being able to customise colours and transparency is a great accessibility feature.

While there’s no way for it to fully read some pattern PDFs depending how they were created, I like how it has a sort of sliding scale of features all the way from fully interactive and searchable, down to “take a photo of your paper pattern and mark stitches off manually” so you can at least always use it even if you don’t have a fully compatible pattern.

Minor dislikes are that it doesn’t do backstitch, and I wish it kept historical stats. But from the designer side my main gripe is that it’s impossible to find any technical info on how to make your patterns compatible other than “use certain approved design software”. But I guess that’s probably just me being extra curious about how things work.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 9 months ago

@thegiddystitcher Thanks for your video on YouTube about Mastadon. My sis sent it to me and now here I am. Looking forward to the new experience.

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