Raster Engraving¶
Raster engraving fills areas with back-and-forth scanning lines, similar to how an inkjet printer works. It's ideal for creating images, text, and filled designs on materials like wood, leather, and anodized aluminum.
Overview¶
Raster operations:
- Fill closed shapes with scanning lines
- Support variable power for grayscale images
- Work with both vector shapes and bitmap images
- Use bidirectional scanning for speed
- Create permanent marks on many materials
When to Use Raster¶
Use raster engraving for:
- Engraving text and logos
- Creating images and photos on wood/leather
- Filling solid areas with texture
- Marking parts and products
- Creating grayscale artwork
Don't use raster for:
- L Cutting through material (use Contour instead)
- L Precise outlines (raster creates filled areas)
- L Fine line work (vectors are cleaner)
Creating a Raster Operation¶
Step 1: Prepare Content¶
Raster works with:
- Vector shapes - Filled with scanning lines
- Text - Converted to filled paths
- Images - Converted to grayscale and engraved
Step 2: Add Raster Operation¶
- Menu: Operations Add Raster
- Shortcut: Ctrl+Shift+R
- Right-click: Context menu Add Operation Raster
Step 3: Configure Settings¶
Key Settings¶
Power & Speed¶
Power (%):
- Laser intensity for the engraving
- Lower power for lighter marking
- Higher power for deeper engraving
- Typical range: 20-60% for engraving
Speed (mm/min):
- How fast the laser scans
- Faster = lighter, slower = darker
- Typical range: 2000-5000 mm/min
Starting values (wood engraving):
- Power: 30-50%
- Speed: 2500-4000 mm/min
- Always test on scrap material!
Line Interval¶
Line Interval (mm):
- Spacing between scan lines
- Smaller = higher quality, longer job time
- Larger = faster, visible lines
Interval | Quality | Speed | Use For |
---|---|---|---|
0.05mm | Highest | Slowest | Photos, fine detail |
0.1mm | High | Medium | Text, logos, graphics |
0.2mm | Medium | Fast | Solid fills, textures |
0.3mm+ | Low | Fastest | Draft, testing |
Recommended: 0.1mm for general use
Resolution Match
For images, line interval should match or exceed image resolution. If your image is 10 pixels/mm (254 DPI), use 0.1mm line interval or smaller.
Scan Direction¶
Scan Angle (degrees):
- Direction of scan lines
- 0 = horizontal (left to right)
- 90 = vertical (top to bottom)
- 45 = diagonal
Why change angle?
- Wood grain: Engrave perpendicular to grain for better results
- Pattern orientation: Match design aesthetics
- Reduce banding: Different angle can hide imperfections
Bidirectional Scanning:
- Enabled: Laser engraves in both directions (faster)
- L Disabled: Laser only engraves left-to-right (slower, more consistent)
For best quality, disable bidirectional. For speed, enable it.
Overscan¶
Overscan Distance (mm):
- How far beyond the design the laser travels before turning around
- Allows laser to reach full speed before entering the design
- Prevents burn marks at line starts/ends
Typical values:
- 2-5mm for most jobs
- Larger for high speeds
- See Overscan for details
Grayscale Images¶
Raster operations can vary laser power based on image brightness:
Image Preparation¶
- Convert to grayscale - Color images are converted automatically
- Adjust contrast - Increase contrast for better engraving
- Increase brightness - Dark images may over-engrave
- Resize - Match your desired output size
Power Mapping¶
- White pixels Laser off (0% power)
- Gray pixels Proportional power (e.g., 50% gray = 50% of max power)
- Black pixels Maximum power setting
Example:
- Max power setting: 60%
- 50% gray pixel 30% actual power
- 100% black pixel 60% actual power
Resolution¶
Image DPI vs Line Interval:
- 254 DPI = 10 pixels/mm use 0.1mm line interval
- 508 DPI = 20 pixels/mm use 0.05mm line interval
Higher resolution images require smaller line intervals for quality.
Tips & Best Practices¶
Material Selection¶
Best materials for raster:
- Wood (natural variations create beautiful results)
- Leather (burns to dark brown/black)
- Anodized aluminum (removes coating, reveals metal)
- Coated metals (removes coating layer)
- Some plastics (test first!)
Challenging materials:
- Clear acrylic (doesn't show engraving well)
- Metals without coating (requires special marking compounds)
- Glass (requires special settings/coatings)
Quality Settings¶
For best quality:
- Use smaller line interval (0.05-0.1mm)
- Disable bidirectional scanning
- Increase overscan (3-5mm)
- Use lower power, multiple passes
- Ensure material is flat and secured
For faster engraving:
- Use larger line interval (0.15-0.2mm)
- Enable bidirectional scanning
- Minimum overscan (1-2mm)
- Single pass at higher power
Common Issues¶
Burn marks at line ends:
- Increase overscan distance
- Check acceleration settings
- Reduce power slightly
Visible scan lines:
- Decrease line interval
- Reduce power (over-burning creates gaps)
- Check that material is flat
Uneven engraving:
- Ensure material is flat
- Check focus consistency
- Verify laser power stability
- Clean laser lens
Banding (dark/light stripes):
- Disable bidirectional scanning
- Check belt tension
- Reduce speed
- Try different scan angle
Material Settings¶
Material | Power | Speed | Line Interval | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Birch plywood | 35-45% | 3000-4000 mm/min | 0.1mm | Nice contrast |
Cherry wood | 30-40% | 3500-4500 mm/min | 0.1mm | Rich dark color |
Leather | 25-35% | 3000-4000 mm/min | 0.1mm | Test on scrap |
Anodized aluminum | 40-50% | 4000-5000 mm/min | 0.1mm | Removes coating |
Cork | 20-30% | 3500-4500 mm/min | 0.15mm | Very forgiving |
Settings vary by laser type and material quality. Always test!
Advanced Techniques¶
Crosshatch Engraving¶
Run raster operation twice at different angles:
- First pass: 0 (horizontal)
- Second pass: 90 (vertical)
Creates deeper, more uniform engraving with crosshatch pattern.
Variable Line Interval¶
For large areas:
- Use fine interval (0.05mm) for detailed areas
- Use coarse interval (0.2mm) for solid fills
- Combine multiple raster operations
Dithering¶
For photo engraving:
- Convert images to dithered black & white
- Creates halftone-like effect
- Better detail than pure grayscale on some materials
Troubleshooting¶
Engraving too light¶
- Increase: Power setting
- Decrease: Speed setting
- Check: Focus is correct
- Try: Multiple passes
Engraving too dark/burning¶
- Decrease: Power setting
- Increase: Speed setting
- Increase: Line interval
- Check: Material is appropriate
Inconsistent darkness¶
- Check: Material is flat
- Check: Focus distance is consistent
- Verify: Laser beam is clean
- Test: Different area of material (grain varies)
Image looks pixelated¶
- Decrease: Line interval
- Check: Source image resolution
- Try: Smaller line interval (0.05mm)
- Verify: Image isn't being upscaled
Scan lines visible¶
- Decrease: Line interval
- Reduce: Power (over-burning creates gaps)
- Try: Different scan angle
- Ensure: Material surface is smooth
Technical Details¶
Scan Pattern Generation¶
Rayforge converts filled shapes to scan lines:
- Determine bounding box
- Calculate scan lines at specified angle and interval
- Clip lines to shape boundaries
- Add overscan extensions
- Optimize scan order (reduce travel time)
- Generate G-code
Bidirectional Scanning¶
Enabled (faster):
Disabled (more consistent):
G-code Example¶
G0 X-2 Y10 ; Move to overscan start
M3 S102 ; Laser on at 40% power
G1 X52 Y10 F3000 ; Scan line at 3000 mm/min
M5 ; Laser off
G0 X52 Y10.1 ; Move to next line
M3 S102 ; Laser on
G1 X-2 Y10.1 F3000 ; Scan back (bidirectional)
M5 ; Laser off
Related Topics¶
- Contour Cutting - Cutting outlines and shapes
- Depth Engraving - Creating 3D relief effects
- Overscan - Improving engraving quality
- Material Test Grid - Finding optimal settings
- Multi-Layer Workflow - Combining raster with other operations