Barudan Punchant Page
If you ever see one for sale at an auction, do not buy it unless you have an electrical engineering degree and a tolerance for pain. But if you find a digitizer who learned on a Punchant—hire them immediately. They speak a forgotten dialect of thread tension and pull compensation that no YouTube tutorial can teach.
The Ghost in the Machine: Unpacking the Genius of the Barudan Punchant
Why a 30-year-old Japanese machine remains the holy grail for high-end lace and Schiffli digitizing. Barudan Punchant
This resulted in a lag between the needle and the pantograph. In modern machines, the needle and the hoop are perfectly synced. In a Punchant file, the needle is always slightly "dragging" behind the hoop movement. This creates a sawtooth edge on satin columns that, when washed in a chemical bath, frays into a perfect, soft eyelash fringe.
I recently visited a factory in Como, Italy. They still run three Punchants. They use them exclusively for "antiquing"—converting modern vector art into files that mimic 1920s hand-run Schiffli. They output the .PUN files to a modern Barudan, then chemically burn away the backing. The result is indistinguishable from lace woven in 1955. The Barudan Punchant is a reminder that digitizing is not graphic design. It is choreography. It is physics. If you ever see one for sale at
To the uninitiated, the Barudan Punchant (often stylized as Punchant or Punch-lant ) looks like a relic. It’s a standalone, dedicated digitizing workstation that peaked in the late 1980s and early 1990s. It has a monochrome CRT screen, a proprietary puck (tablet), and a user interface that makes DOS look like iOS.
Because the Punchant's processor was so slow (we're talking 8MHz), it couldn't store complex shape data. Instead, it stored commands . "Go left. Satin stitch, width 1.2mm. Density 4. Stop." The actual curve was drawn by the machine's real-time kinematics. The Ghost in the Machine: Unpacking the Genius
If you spend enough time in the back hallways of industrial embroidery—away from the roar of 15-head Tajimas and the clickbait of “auto-punch” software—you will eventually hear a name whispered with a mix of reverence and frustration: