Laser Engraving In Color?

laser engraved color

Here’s a fantastic way to add a new dynamic to your laser cut and engraved parts. Did you know it is possible to color your engravings on acrylic? It’s kind of one of those moments where you go “Why didn’t I think of that?”

[Frankie Flood] works at the Digital Craft Research Lab (DCRL for short), which is kind of like a hackerspace for the University of Wisconsin — complete with CNC routers, lasers, 3D printers, and all your basic manufacturing tools.  [Lionel Rocheleau], one of his lab technicians at DCRL was interested in doing some experiments with the laser cutter, so they came up with this experiment…

By raster engraving a piece of acrylic, you can then spread a color dye powder over top the acrylic… and then run the engraving again, this time at a lower power and a higher speed. This allows you to basically melt the dye into the engraving. It’ll take a few layers to get a good and consistent color, but it really is that simple!

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We’re going to have to try this with the Jolly Wrencher ASAP!

We find people tend to overlook the possibilities with laser cutters. Yeah they’re a bit more expensive than 3D printers, but boy can you do a lot with them! Did you know you can form basic folded acrylic parts using a laser cutter? It’s called Laser Origami… and it’s awesome.

23 thoughts on “Laser Engraving In Color?

  1. Maybe it could be possible to laser etch fine enough to produce iridescence. Or maybe add a static charge yo the acrylic then “knock off” the charge and then raster back over the acrylic (or oven/halogen bake) to possibly get a better finish.

  2. Hm, I haven’t had the opportunity/pleasure of working with a laser cutter so I am not sure quite how accurate they are ‘depthwise’, but maybe someone could also come up with a thin, multi-layer set of adhesive color sheeting, translucent at the lowest layer, and then the laser could in effect do the ‘cut-outs’ ?

    1. What about three colours stacked in a laminated sheet. Have them bleed into each other. Thus creating say 256bit colour depth. You then raster scan over the image. The faster you go the less you etch, allowing you to choose the colour.

      1. That’s an interesting idea, but it would probably be too expensive in practice. Also, You would only be able to cut on one surface. Plus, the more I think about it, it would probably not be very scratch resistant (small scratches would show up as the top color). Some colors might be rather difficult to do. If the colors were (from surface to deep) red, green, blue; indigo would be hard if not impossible because it would require removal of the middle layer while leaving the other two. I may have the resultant color incorrect, because addition & subtraction of pigmentation is different than addition & subtraction of light frequencies (the primaries for pigments are red, yellow, blue; light is red, green, blue).

      2. Thing is, you can only bleed adjacent colors. So you would need to stack enough layers to get every combination next to eachother, and allow the lazer to cut down past the layer/combos it cant use for that “pixel”

        So more like R,G,B,R,B I think would be the layers if it was a RGB pallet being used. (Id guess it would be something different)

      1. Most engravers plastic on the market today has a very thin cap (the top colored layer) and is designed for laser use, though one can still find the older engravers plastic that has a thicker cap and is designed to be cut. The laser version can also be used in older rotary equipment, but the older stuff doesn’t work well in lasers, and has a tendency to warp or burn.

    1. It’s seems like you could do SLS to get this effect. Turn the laser power way down, spread your color powder layer on top of the substrate layer, and use the laser to melt the color down onto the substrate.
      I would think you would need a short pulse laser to ablate the color layer from that engraving plastic without a large heat affected zone and porous re-melt of the kerf.

    2. There is another material for laser engraving called ColorCast from Rowmark. There’s a thin color layer on the BACK of the sheet of clear (1/8″ or 1/4″) material. You engrave the back side with a reverse image which leaves a frosted clear area. Perfect to put LEDs behind for indicators.

      But you can also paint the engraved areas. It doesn’t need to be a perfect job as the panel is opaque except where the back layer has been engraved. A wide brush to fill the engraved area and a little more is all that’s needed. I used three different paint colors to color-code my labels.

  3. Looks neat, this allows clear acrylic with selective color. I’ve lasered color before by spray painting the backside black (or any color), then lasering in reverse through the paint and spraying a different color. This can be repeated many times with different colors, which would give the result of a black background with colored objects – with a very glossy front face, which is great for control panels and such.

  4. I tried it and I have problems. When I laser with too less power, it stays a powder.
    When I go stronger it burns all the powder. I do not really find the perfect setting.
    Does anyone have settings?

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