Support (plugin) for embroidery files
Posted: 05 Jan 2008, 07:32
I've breezed by reviews, screenshots and testimonials for Salamander and use the programs for a mere two minutes and I'm already in love with this thing. This seems to be the end all file organization program, the thing I've been looking for ever since I've been using Windows.
I see that Pictview supports dozens of well-known and not so well known image formats...pretty much any user of this program will at least be able to preview thier image (even vector file support? Amazing!). But one thing that most programs in the world don't address (besides ones built for them) are embroidery files. Files that contain data for embroidering designs on material. If you view them with the right viewer, such as Embird, it's nearly equivalent to viewing the image of the stitching itself. It'd be great if a plugin was addeed that could support embroidering file formats, so they could be previewed before they're organized. This would be great for people like my mother who have thousands of embroidery files and needs an efficient way to view and organize them all when they are somewhat strewn about and are in different archives and such.
Just my suggestion. Thanks for the awesome program.
I see that Pictview supports dozens of well-known and not so well known image formats...pretty much any user of this program will at least be able to preview thier image (even vector file support? Amazing!). But one thing that most programs in the world don't address (besides ones built for them) are embroidery files. Files that contain data for embroidering designs on material. If you view them with the right viewer, such as Embird, it's nearly equivalent to viewing the image of the stitching itself. It'd be great if a plugin was addeed that could support embroidering file formats, so they could be previewed before they're organized. This would be great for people like my mother who have thousands of embroidery files and needs an efficient way to view and organize them all when they are somewhat strewn about and are in different archives and such.
Just my suggestion. Thanks for the awesome program.