These free teach apple SVG and apple outline SVGs are great for Cricut, Silhouette, or any other cutting machine crafts.
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What to make with your Apple SVG
When we say ‘apple,’ people immediately think about the fruit or the famous tech brand. Apple became synonymous with the brand that sometimes, it could get confusing for some. However, this time, we will be talking about apples the fruit.
Apples are known for their iconic red and green color. Almost everyone in the world tasted apple once in their lives. This fruit, for some, is just ordinary. It is a thing we can easily pick up on a market and store. Although sweet, apples are not out of this world. Unknown to most, the apple is an ‘interesting’ fruit. Why? Read more!
Did you know that there are 7,500 varieties of apples? Yes, it is! How mind-blowing is that fact? You can find 2,500 of these varieties in the United States of America. When you think apples are getting boring, maybe it is time to check out other apple varieties available in your area.
Red and green became the official colors for apples. But like its varieties, apples have a wide variety of colors. Besides red and green, apples are also colored yellow, pink, russeted, bi, or tri-colored. The more we know! Interestingly, this everyday fruit has more to it than most of us know. Apples are popular, but people barely know more about them. Next time, better hit your local flea market. They may be hiding those precious apple varieties you never tried before.
Interested in related designs? Check out my Free Pencil SVG and Free Crayon SVG Templates.
How to turn any image into an SVG template?
Interested in learning the easiest way to make your own SVG?
Here’s a quick tutorial on how to turn any image into an SVG format image without having to use any complicated graphics editing software.
First, a quick primer on what is an SVG… SVG stands for Scalable Vector Graphics. It is a way to store digital information about an image. Most images you see on the web and other digital devices use a bitmap or pixel-based image storage format. In other words, the image is captured with information about each dot in the image.
SVG format images are part of a category of images that are vector-based. Vector-based images store the image as a series of paths and nodes. Most cutting machines like the Cricut and Silhouette use SVG format images because the blade on the machine needs to know what direction (or path) to cut.
To turn a bitmap-based image into a vector-based image, you need special conversion software tools. This is an algorithm tricky conversion because there are lots of different ways to do it with varying degrees in quality. Most graphic editing software like Adobe Illustration make you manually decide on those conversion settings which makes it really difficult to use if you’re not already familiar with Illustrator.
I use a software tool called Vector Magic. With Vector Magic, you just upload your image (you can even copy and paste it in) and it automatically just converts to an SVG format for you. You can make editorial adjustments afterward if you’d like but there is a baseline conversion ready to go if that’s good enough.
Here’s an image for you to give it a try yourself. It’s a bunch of cute animal drawings I did the other day. I just took a picture of it with my phone. Try copy and paste this image into the Vector Magic interface. (Right-click on the image below, select “copy”, then head over to Vector Magic and past it into the window or just hit Ctrl+V)
After you pasted your image into the Vector Magic window, it will automatically start to convert your image:
This will take a few seconds. When the process is complete, you will see the vectorized SVG image on the right with the original on the left.
If you don’t like the automated conversion, there are a number of different adjustments you can make from the right tool panel.
After making adjustments, you can download your converted image as an SVG and then upload it to your cutting machine interface like Cricut Design Space below:
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How does one find the link for the apple svg?
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