Laser Engraving Photos: Difference between revisions

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Depending on what wood you are planning to use the laser cutter settings may vary a lot. If your wood is somehow valuable or you only have one chance to get it right, it is advisable to give it a test run on regular piece of cheaper [[plywood]].
Depending on what wood you are planning to use the laser cutter settings may vary a lot. If your wood is somehow valuable or you only have one chance to get it right, it is advisable to give it a test run on regular piece of cheaper [[plywood]].


* make sure to [https://wiki.comaking.space/Wanted:Laser_Cutter#Focusing | set the focus right]  
* make sure to [[Wanted:Laser_Cutter#Focusing | set the focus right]]  
* for engraving the piece of wood shown below, the following settings were chosen:
* for engraving the piece of wood shown below, the following settings were chosen:
** Power 100; Engrave: Speed 100; 3D Engrave: Speed 10
** Power 100; Engrave: Speed 100; 3D Engrave: Speed 10

Revision as of 23:42, 24 January 2018

Wooden piece 3d engrave.jpg

Engraving photos on various materials can be an awesome alternative to just printing them on paper!

Here are some tips for creating beautiful laser engraved pictures (confirmed to work on plywood, but should be rather general).

Photo Preparation

  • it's very important to convert your photo to grayscale and desaturate it (e.g. using GIMP or Photoshop) - people have to look like ghosts
    • this is because your substrate, unlike white paper, will likely make everything darker
  • (optional, but beneficial in many cases) remove the background or at least make it even fainter than the part of the photo you are interested in
  • open the altered file in Visicut or another laser cutting program and apply the appropriate engraving settings for the chosen material as usual
  • check that you don't have large areas that are to be engraved completely or areas without engraving, but varying densities of points everywhere
  • zoom in on a critical area with high contrast - eyes are nice for that - and check again
  • (if you haven't edited the background) try to estimate how well the background is separated from the main part of the photo, i.e. is there a clear difference in point density?
    • if not, think about removing or altering the background again
  • Once your photo is edited like described above you could also add text or a frame for cutting the photo out of the wooden plate
  • if you apply different colors for the text or the frame the afterwards cutting tool Visicut will easily distinguish between them

If you are interested in more details, please let Lukas know and he will do his best to add pictures as soon as possible!

3D Engraving

Depending on what wood you are planning to use the laser cutter settings may vary a lot. If your wood is somehow valuable or you only have one chance to get it right, it is advisable to give it a test run on regular piece of cheaper plywood.

  • make sure to set the focus right
  • for engraving the piece of wood shown below, the following settings were chosen:
    • Power 100; Engrave: Speed 100; 3D Engrave: Speed 10
    • Even though I like the outcome I would recommend using a slightly higher speed (maybe 15-20) which would not burn too deep into the wood and result in a brighter photo
Close-up of the 3d engraved photo