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Kiss Cut Lettering with a Laser Cutter

2023-08-17 | By Kitronik Maker

License: See Original Project

Courtesy of Kitronik

Guide by Kitronik

A laser cuts or engraves by localised vaporisation of the surface. This literally ‎blows away some material.

If you are cutting then you get left with a hole all the way through the material, and ‎if you are engraving you are left with just a shallow crater.

Most laser cutters have options to cut or engrave in their software

options_1

Laser Engraving is generally a raster operation - where a picture is broken into a ‎pattern of parallel lines and the laser is scanned over it turning on and off - much ‎like an old CRT display.

You can get some excellent effects with raster engraving - check out Emma's blog ‎on scan gap engraving.

'Kiss cutting' is a different laser technique that lightly engraves a surface, but the ‎laser doesn't follow a raster pattern, it follows a cut line. 'Kiss cutting' is especially ‎useful for engraving lettering.

A lot of fonts will not successfully raster engrave - the software requires an ‎engraved area to be 'closed', which only works if a font has 'thickness'. Where a ‎font will engrave, the nature of raster engraving means the lettering often looks ‎‎'pixelated'.‎

'Kiss cutting' more closely mimics handwriting, where letters are formed from ‎individual strokes. For script type fonts it works really well.

Here's a quick 'how to' on creating your own 'Kiss cut' ‎lettering:

We often use LibreCAD to make our laser cutter files. It’s a free 2D CAD package. ‎This blog will assume you are using it, but other 2D packages have similar ‎functionality.

To demonstrate I will use the short phrase:

"Laser Cutters cut with light"

First insert the text into LibreCAD using the text tool:

texttool_2

This creates a single text object. To convert this into a path for the laser to follow, ‎select it and use the explode function.

path_3

Using Explode converts the letters from objects into single lines. If you ‎use Explode Text into Letters, then it creates lots of objects as though you had ‎individually created each letter with the Text tool. This means that the letters are ‎still not lines, which is what we want for kiss cutting.

Once you have exploded your text if you want to rearrange the letters - for instance Rachel wanted swoopy lines to fit with her artwork:

art_4

You can use the normal move, copy, rotate tools to do this.

I usually create a set of guides on another layer to help line everything up. Don't ‎forget to draw the outline of the shape you want to cut:

layers_5

Save your work and then open the .dxf file in your laser cutter software.

This is where we setup to 'kiss cut'. Our laser cutter cuts through the 5mm value ‎acrylic I used in this blog at a setting of 65% power and 6 speed.

setup_6

To 'kiss cut' I create another cut setting with drastically reduced power - to 15%, ‎and increased speed. This results in less energy being applied to the acrylic, with ‎the result that only the surface is vaporised.

setup_7

Kiss cut lettering shows up really nicely when illuminated from the side, such as ‎with our 35150 white or 3561 colour changing LED strips.

lettering_8

Of course, kiss cutting doesn't just have to be for letters. Any item where you want ‎to engrave thin lines into the surface could be made using this technique - such as ‎this nifty see thru rule:

ruler_9

Rachel's stand came out really nicely, with crisp lettering only 3mm high:

clear_10

Her ghostly Slender-billed Curlew simply supported as it fades into a memory:

ghost_11

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