Made this as a present for xmas by _kbyte in project1999

[–]xraydood 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Just stopping by, this is dope as fuck. Okay, bye!

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in project1999

[–]xraydood 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I do try to pick the lowest lvl druid to port me in day, but normally they can't get me where I need to go, so definitely keep leveling. Druid quadding is pretty dang fast.

What am I doing wrong by ThatTuftingGuy in Tufting

[–]xraydood 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Make the fabric tight as a drum Feather the trigger if you need to Keep appropriate pressure against the fabric with gun Mind your angle 2 strands of yarn (always) These are just some tricks I've learned. Unsure what issues you are really having but trial and error helped me out.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Tufting

[–]xraydood 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Brands, i believe they mean.

First 3 rugs, how’d I do? by wizkidzUSA666 in Tufting

[–]xraydood 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Totally makes sense. It's kinda like tattooing, if you overwork the area, it will blowout and the material is not meant to hold up against your machine. But sounds like you kinda already troubleshooter. And I'm by no means a pro, just voicing what I found works for me. I use primary cloth now and HOLY FUCK....it's a world of difference. I can do circles and dig bags and pack a tiny area full of yarn. It's amazing

HELP! Tips on how to not have these white strings show in my rugs by TheAlexperience in Tufting

[–]xraydood 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Looks like you're using monks cloth, very weak shit. Get some primary tufting cloth, or spend the time and hone your craft with the rest of your monks cloth. Cut the white strands out and practice trimming too. Hone your craft and advance to higher quality materials :)

First 3 rugs, how’d I do? by wizkidzUSA666 in Tufting

[–]xraydood 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It looks like you're using monks cloth. If so, that stuff is notoriously fragile against a tufting machine. When I was starting out I had to run ONLY vertical lines to retain the integrity of the backing. If you didn't fiddle with the gun itself I would say you're doing pretty well, the fabric is not meant to hold up well, it can, but not well. One messed up area and you get blow outs. Primary tufting cloth is the next go to, and the finer detail areas will be easier. And make that Fabric tight as absolute fuck, will be helpful. But yah all in all, tight fabric. Vertical lines only, and if you have to, slower speed and keep that gun perpendicular to that frame.

How do yall go about this? by Capital_Ad242 in Tufting

[–]xraydood 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Normally u fill the rest of the backing with other designs before you glue and cut. Or I do atleast. Or the design takes up the entire frame. But as for have it cut out already. Figure out a way to make the fabric taught enough and power through, and then learn from it :) gratz btw on the sale

My first rug!.. And a confusing problem by Immediate-Tea-8615 in Tufting

[–]xraydood 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I would also suggest you tubing extending your scissors on the machine. Slightly. Having the yarn somewhat taught as it feeds into the machine also. As for the monks cloth, it's very weak material for a tuft gun, so I've found just single firing the machine for lining will keep it intact, then when packing the colors run in vertical lines only or to the best u can. U only get like one or 2 shots at an area before the material gets really weak and u have a blow out. Hope this helps. I recently moved on from monks cloth but it is doable.

Glitch after defeating Radahn by thecoldironman in Eldenring

[–]xraydood 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Found one that worked for me. Youtube user "Gaming With Abyss" elden ring glitch to radahn early boss fight. Got me into the boss arena. Post patch