Cutting is the hardest part I think, for me anyways. My hands get so soare, then I make mistakes, and it's back to the printer to pop out another p[age of uncut parts. I have a Silohouette Cameo paper cutting machine, but you have to do each model page by hand, sometimes they don't fit so you have to Photoshop the pages onto a page that will, but if the .pdf is locked, you can't do that, and even if you can, it takes hours, many hours, to outline all the models. Once don, it does work, and very precisely. The first machine I got was flawed and after two weeks of trying and spending an hour with the technician there, they decided it was flaw3ed and sent me another machine. I was so aggravated, I have this new machine, and I haven't used it since I got it. I don't even know if it works, that how disgusted I got with it. The way you outline parts, is with "control points", dragging a line around the part. This is similar to making the part. It's almost like copying the parts, but just the outline. With all the formats available, thy should have made the thing compatible with .dxf, or any of the other 60 or so formats, so you could just transfer the data. In Rhino, for instance, I can just click on a button, and it will give me the outline of the part, but there is no way to import that in to the Cameo cutter. It was kind of a $300+ waste of money.
It loos like you did a great job cutting. I get tired just looking at it!
