Bought it; can’t wait to play with it! But the gumroad download link isn’t giving me any payload… Just an empty void in the browser
Yikes, that’s no good. Let me check into it and I’ll post back. Sorry!
I’m unable to load the product interface on Gumroad at the moment. Seems like they might be having issues. I’m going to keep an eye on it, and hopefully it will resolve soon.
Other users are also reporting parts of Gumroad being down at the moment.
I’ve emailed you a direct download until Gumroad sorts things out.
Seems like Gumroad is back to normal operations.
Bought it, having an absolute blast with it. I still don’t understand it well enough to be able to get predictable results, but there’s a lot of fun in that! I used it to produce a t-shirt (via heat press media) for my grandson of him playing soccer, and a t-shirt for myself based off of a White Tara thangka.
Crazy addictive…
That’s awesome! Did you use the color separations for the t-shirt printing?
If you wouldn’t mind posting a review on the Gumroad page, I would appreciate it.
Sure, will do. But I need a little help understanding what’s going on. Here’s a picture of Namgyalma (longevity and protection), and two examples of what came out of Tessera (before I got religion about logging the settings I used…) See the one with the huge color blocks but a smaller rendering of Namgyalma? I can’t for the life of me figure out how to get that effect again.
I’m just doing amateur tshirt stuff, printing on heat press materials. The reason for wanting the color block capability (with some degree of reliability and control) is that it makes something easy to cut out on a black tshirt heat press material… if I could get those big triangles a bit smaller around the subject…
I’ll do a post with three different starting images and the three outputs that I picked to use as graphics on tshirts. I absolutely love messing around with it.
Here’s the image I did for grandson. Cropped to get down to just him.
In the export dialog, select “Full canvas” as your Boundaries choice. This shows the entirety of what’s been painted to the canvas, all the shapes that extend “out-of-bounds” when recreating the image.




