Alrighty, I have a question about how signcut interprets an inline sort (i.e. cutting the innies first).
I wanted to ask, because I want to make sure I understand how signcut interprets, to save myself work. Or, if I need to do in a certain way, I will.
Example file is attached (which by the way, is my interpretation of some scroll I found somewhere on the internet, you are welcome to take the file - it isn't perfect but pretty close and it should cut really clean and it has minimal nodes).
You will see I divided this file by the innie cut and the outtie cut, with the outter cut being black and the inner cut being red. I gave it all fill, no stroke.
So, if I send the two layers to signcut simultaneously (I didn't cut - getting late so tired), and if I just select the red in the signcut menu, those inner pieces - I don't know, it doesn't look spread out like it should, but the black does.
Also, if I hide the outter black layer, and just send the red innie layer, it looks the same as if I had sent both layers together and just selected the red.
I guess what I am asking, is do I really need to take this approach at an inline sort, or does signcut automatically interpret that? I know layers of course are used to distinguish different parts of a file for multiple step images or projects. I was just wondering if a user is concerned with cutting the innies first, is thing a good thing to do, or unnecessary?
Thanks!
Pat