![]() ![]() If you find something that needs correction, please get in touch and straighten me out. Also, I almost certainly have some of the chronology wrong, so I am open to corrections. So this article is a high-level review of the products that Cricut has offered and discontinued over the years.Ĭaveat - I have only owned a few of the products mentioned here, and I have not ever really put even those "through their paces." So, much of the content about machines after the Expression (1) is based on information from sources I have deemed reliable. So I figured that, some of my articles about using Cricuts for certain projects wouldn't make much sense without context. But some of those machines are more useful than others. Most of the old cartridge-based machines are still quite functional, as long as you have cartridges or software to drive them. ![]() This includes dropping support for all cartridge-based machines, as well as the Cricut Mini, which depended on now-discontinued online software to be useful at all, and which is now essentially a brick. Cricut has dropped support for everything but their newer machines (Explore and later).After a decade of trying to force people to use only their graphics and fonts, Cricut is now allowing users of their newer machines to import files from other sources.Much of the content was true when it was written, but is not true now. But when I started to write about them, I realized quickly that most of what I "knew" about Cricuts back when my Expression was new and shiny is no longer true.Īnd my attempts to figure out what was still valid and what was not led me to discover that hundreds of web pages about Cricuts and related topics include statements that are just plain wrong. It got me thinking of all the other things hobbyists could use them for. Recently, I got my old Cricut Expression out of storage for a signage project. ![]()
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