I remember as a kid sometimes having to do the old "grid trick" - you draw a grid of squares of specified dimension (usually 1") and then redraft the pattern onto the big grid from the smaller grid it was printed on in the book or magazine. (Many magazines had maddeningly small grids...it was like, "You expect me to get the detail correct from that tiny of an original?" I guess the "grid method" of enlarging is mostly a lost skill now. (I will admit to being a lot less enthusiastic about making a project when I had to enlarge the pattern first)
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I got more done on the pillowcases. This is the one that's farthest along:
![pillowcase May 3](http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3574/3500687864_5aa58e404c.jpg)
The butterflies are done, and I'm slowly adding the outlining.
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We had some borderline severe weather on Saturday. We never get the "golf ball" or "tennis ball" sized hail that the weathercasters salivate over, but this go-round, we did get some tiny, pea-sized hailstones:
![hail](http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3378/3499869793_ec3dbc6e05.jpg)
They had mostly melted by the time I got the camera out.
1 comment:
One way to deal with a copier with set enlargement possibilities is to enlarge your design by whatever amount the copier will allow. Then enlarge that enlargement by that amount and keep repeating this until you get it the size you want.
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