In this video, we move the location of existing type by choosing the Select Object tool and clicking one of the characters. When the text object window asks whether to select only that character, we click No so the entire lettering object stays selected. We then click and drag the lettering upward. With the text still selected, we change the letter color to Isacord 2300 by choosing the Select New Color icon, opening the Isacord tab, locating 2300, and selecting the pink thread color.
Next, we enter the word classic underneath using the same font and settings as before. We click the Lettering icon, click in the work area, type classic, keep the same stitch settings, and click OK so it appears directly below. We then click the Lettering icon again, click between the words women and classic, and enter GOLF in all caps. For this word, we change the font to Helvetica Compressed, set the character size to .526, and set the character spacing to .039. Under the Stitches tab, we keep the density at 63, keep the stitch length the same, check Center Walk underlay, leave the sewing direction set to left to right, and click OK.
After that, we change the color of GOLF from pink to Isacord 4515. We use the Select Object icon, click one of the letters, choose No when asked to select only that character, then use the Select New Color icon to open the Isacord tab and select 4515. With GOLF still selected, we click and drag it directly underneath women. We then select classic, drag it directly underneath GOLF, and center it using the center marking aligned with zero.
Finally, we add a year underneath the design. We click the Lettering icon, click below the existing text, and enter the year. We select the font Helvetica Condensed, set the character size to .394, and leave the character spacing the same. Under the Stitches tab, we change the density to 57, or 2.25 mm, and change the stitch length to 984, or 2.5 mm. We also check Center Walk underlay, leave the sewing direction set to left to right, and click OK.
Support edited lettering and balanced stitch settings with the right embroidery stabilizer.