![]() ![]() Most of the writing I do with my Cricut machine is for card making projects. I’m going to set the text to 4.5 inches wide. This method of filling in a letter with the offset doesn’t require you to weld the font before making the project! Even a font with problems like Badgear works! Letters like the lower case ‘s’ and ‘e’ fill in when welded. It doesn’t have a thick-then-thin swooping quality you get with caligraphic script fonts, so it should be pretty easy to illustrate how to fill it in.Īnother interesting aspect to this font is that it looks good in Cricut Design Space, but it doesn’t weld. The font I’m using is Badgear Demo from Fontspace – I recently used it on an anniversary card, and I use it for this example because not only is it a fancy script font, its lines are uniform width. ![]() They look great on the screen, but we have to make adjustments in Design Space so the final product looks as good as it did on your computer. These fonts are not specifically designed for Cricut. When I need more formal or fancy script fonts, I usually have to find third party fonts. Cricut has its own selection of fonts that are designed specifically for writing, but they don’t really satisfy every need. Step 1: Open Design Space on your computer and add your textįor the basic steps of this tutorial I’m going to start with a script font that is not a Cricut font. Video: How to make Cricut fill in Letters
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