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Possibilities
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When exploring the possibilities of the various font cartridges, it really pays off to see the benefits of the Creative Feature keys. This is why you shouldn’t rule out any cartridge; you’ll always be able to find practical and/or artistic uses for them! Tear Drop is no exception when it comes to this principle.

While the font set itself is so cute and reminiscent of an early 70’s look (retro is so hot right now!), take a moment to look at both the Tall and the Dropless Creative keys. Basically, these features give you two additional font sets. The Tall feature has the same Tear Drop appearance, but the letters have about half the width of the main set. The Dropless feature has the same stretched look without the drops at the ends of the letters. I’m just hypothesizing here, but it’s as if the artist, Heather Lancaster, wanted to make sure we could have the feminine, the masculine, and the ‘wow-that’s-awesome’ font sets all in one cartridge!


One more thing to get the juices flowing: With school starting soon for many of us, it’s fun to have personalized spiral or composition notebooks. On pages 20 and 21 of the Tear Drop handbook, there is a great idea for using this cartridge. With minor color changes or a little tweaking of the layout, you can create some very fun, compliment-invoking, conversation-starting notebooks or journals.
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Cartridge Overview
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All of the cartridges have two Creative Features in common. They are Shadow and Blackout. The function of these two keys are exactly the same in all circumstances: Shadow perfectly mats the original graphic and Blackout gives you a general shadow of the original but with no interior cuts (such as the two holes in a capital letter B).
Discovering the rest of the individual cartridges Creative Features is like embarking on a scavenger hunt where you shriek "ah ha" every time you try out a new one. Doesn't it make you excited to find out what new ones the Cricut team will come up with next?
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Samples
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This week, I decided to share with you a trick I use to find the perfect font set for a specific project. Much has been said on the message board about how to keep track of what you have in your library from keeping the handbooks at your fingertips to printing 8.5 x 11" copies of the individual handbooks. Here's what works for me. Instead of printing the entire graphic set from the online font handbooks, I chose four different letters (E, G, T, W). From the online handbooks, I printed out only those pages. Then, on those pages, I wrote what set it was from. I inserted the pages into sheet protectors and organized them by putting all "E" pages together, all "G"s, and so forth. Since I have all the font cartridges (except for the much-hoped-for, rare Doodletype!), I did this for all the sets. 
If you choose to try this method of Cricut library organization, decide for yourself what letters of which you want samples. I chose "E" because it is an oft-used letter and for it's single-line height when lower cased. The "G" was picked for its 2-line height (below the main line) and because the lower case letter comes in many different appearances. The "T" was used for its 2-line, (above the main line) look and its frequent use. Finally, the "W" was used to identify clearly which font sets have rounded, sharp, classic, or funky features.
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Features in Common
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Many Cricut users have purchased all of the cartridges currently on the market. Using coupons, sales, the internet, LSS’, and TV shopping shows, the country’s going buggy in a big way!
Not including the special cartridge available through QVC or George and Basic Shapes, there are six font cartridges and six shape cartridges. The fonts include: All Mixed Up, Base Camp, Jasmine, Mini Monograms, Stamped, and Teardrop. The shape cartridges are Animal Kingdom, Beyond Birthdays, Celebrations, Christmas Cheer, Doodlecharms, and Tags, Bags, Boxes & More.
All of the cartridges have two Creative Features in common. They are Shadow and Blackout. The function of these two keys are exactly the same in all circumstances: Shadow perfectly mats the original graphic and Blackout gives you a general shadow of the original but with no interior cuts (such as the two holes in a capital letter B).
Discovering the rest of the individual cartridges’ Creative Features is like embarking on a scavenger hunt where you shriek “ah ha” every time you try out a new one. Doesn’t it make you excited to find out what new ones the Cricut team will come up with next?
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