Friday, April 23, 2010

Sneaky-peek shots of a work in progress....


... are a great excuse...


... to play with a macro setting on a camera.

There will be a new pattern finished (by hook or by crook) for the Stitches and Craft Show. I'll be launching it there with a special deal... but it's a secret, ok?
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PS. On a not-so-separate matter.... Can anyone please help me out with a conversion chart from millimeters to FRACTIONS (not decimals) of inches? All the online conversions I've tried just give me decimals... and who works in three decimal places of an inch?! I cannot get my head around fractions of inches, but it seems that a lot of you quite like them.

15 comments:

  1. a conversion chart

    http://www.motorcontrol.com/formulae/decimal_metric.htm

    hope it helps

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  2. oh- I just emailed you one too!

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  3. So excited about the new pattern, cant wait to see what it is. This covers the metric markings on the sewing machine.

    6mm = 1/4 inch
    10mm = 3/8 inch
    13mm = 1/2 inch
    16mm = 5/8 inch
    18mm = 3/4 inch
    22mm = 7/8 inch
    25mm = 1 inch

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  4. oops - it should be
    19mm = 3/4 inch (not 18mm)

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  5. Here's one that's easier to use than most - converts from mm to practical equivalent fractions, or the reverse - fractions to practical equivalent mm's. Might be just what you're looking for. Good luck!
    http://www.edsebooks.com/paper/inchmetric.html

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  6. Love the pics. Intriguing .... guess all will be revealed at the craft show.

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  7. Looks like you are covered for conversions. Can't everyone else just do metric?? I like using a 1cm seam allowance (2cm for hems, of course!) and have just transferred that habit to my bag patterns.

    I received a table of waddings, listing all their different properties including thickness. But I was baffled by one that said 3/32ths. I do love saying thirty-twoths though. Silly word.

    three thirty-twoths.

    Yummy chain stitch btw!

    Cheers,
    AJ

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  8. Very tantalising sneak pickies!

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  9. Oh, these sneak peeks are just so lovely. Mmmm... can't wait to see more!

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  10. I see you have plenty of mm conversions to help you now. I know LOTS of maths geeks like to sew as it's quite numerous & spatial, things we love doing for fun. Love Posie

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  11. Thanks for posting the question, Nikki, I'll try to use the links in the comments above too! 2 weeks ago I tried to use a ruler in inches to measure my items before listing them on Etsy, and double checked it on Google. I discovered that I never found the same result. And finally discovered too that an inch is divided in *16* parts and not in 10. Well, faaar too complicated for me, obviously! :)

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  12. I see you've got lots of suggestions, but her's one more.
    http://www.hamuniverse.com/antfrac.html

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  13. Here's another one! You enter your measurement and it converts it automatically for you.

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  14. Oh dear, forgot to put the link:

    http://www.efunda.com/units/fractions.cfm

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  15. you could type all your numbers with decimals in excel and then convert them all into fractions (right click on the cell > format cells > number tab > fraction > then select up to one digit :)

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I LOVE to read your comments and they brighten my day. I can't respond unless your profile has an email address attached, though... And some days I simply don't have time to respond.... but I respond in a telepathic sort of way to each and every comment.
xxx Nikki