website Ir directamente al contenido
How to Engrave Photos with Your Tyvok Laser: Step-by-Step Guide for Beginners

How to Engrave Photos with Your Tyvok Laser: Step-by-Step Guide for Beginners

Engraving photos onto wood, leather, or slate is one of the most popular things people do with their laser engravers. Custom photo engravings make amazing gifts – think pet portraits on wooden keychains, family photos on plaques, wedding photos on coasters. And with a quality machine like the **Tyvok A1 Mini** or **Tyvok P2**, you can get professional-looking photo engravings even as a beginner. In this step-by-step guide, we'll walk you through everything you need to know to get great results engraving photos with your Tyvok laser. We'll cover choosing the right photo, preparing it in LightBurn, choosing the right settings, and getting the best results on different materials. Let's get started. ## What You'll Need Before we start, gather these things: - Your Tyvok laser (A1 Mini or P2 works great) - A quality honeycomb platform like the **Tyvok engraving platform** - The material you want to engrave (we recommend starting with light-colored hardwood like maple or birch) - LightBurn software (this is what most people use for photo engraving, and it works perfectly with Tyvok machines) - The photo you want to engraving (digital copy, of course) ## Step 1: Choose the Right Photo for Engraving Not all photos work equally well for laser engraving. Choosing the right photo is half the battle. Here's what to look for: ### Good Photos for Engraving: - **High contrast** – Photos with good contrast between light and dark work much better than low-contrast photos. - **Clear subject** – A clear main subject against a simple background works better than a busy photo with lots of small details. - **Good resolution** – A higher resolution photo gives you more detail to work with. Aim for at least 300 DPI at the size you want to engrave. - **Fewer fine details that are close together** – Very fine details close together can get lost when the laser burns them. Simpler compositions usually work better. ### Bad Photos for Engraving: - **Low contrast, foggy photos** – Everything comes out looking the same gray color, so you can't see the subject clearly. - **Busy backgrounds with lots going on** – The background distracts from the main subject, and all the small details get muddled together. - **Very dark photos** – It's hard to get different shades of gray when the whole photo is already dark. - **Blurry photos** – If the original photo is blurry, the engraved version will be blurry too. Pro tip: Portrait photos of people or pets almost always work really well for photo engraving, especially when it's a close-up with a simple background. That's why pet portraits on keychains and plaques are so popular. ## Step 2: Prepare Your Photo in LightBurn Once you've chosen your photo, you need to prepare it for engraving in LightBurn. Here's how to do it step by step: 1. **Import the photo into LightBurn** – Open LightBurn, create a new document that matches the size you want to engrave, then import your photo. 2. **Crop the photo** – Crop the photo to focus on the main subject. You don't need all the extra background. Getting closer to the subject usually gives a better result. 3. **Convert to grayscale** – Photo engraving works best with grayscale, so convert your color photo to grayscale. In LightBurn, you can do this with the "Adjust Image" tool. 4. **Adjust contrast and brightness** – This is the most important step. You usually need to increase the contrast to make the light areas lighter and the dark areas darker. This helps the laser create different shades of gray in the engraving. What to adjust: - **Contrast:** Increase it by 10-20% compared to the original. - **Brightness:** If your photo is too dark, increase the brightness. If it's too light, decrease it. - **Dithering:** LightBurn can automatically dither the image for you. For most lasers, the Floyd-Steinberg dithering gives great results. 5. **Resize the image** – Resize the image to match the size you want to engrave on your material. Make sure it fits within the working area of your machine. For the **Tyvok A1 Mini**, you can go up to 150mm x 150mm. For the **Tyvok P2**, you can go up to 100mm x 100mm. 6. **Move the image to the correct position** – Position it where you want it on your material, and set your origin. ## Step 3: Choose the Right Material for Photo Engraving Different materials give different results for photo engraving. Here are the best materials to start with: ### 1. Light-Colored Hardwood (Maple, Birch, Alder) This is the best material for beginners to start with. The light wood gives you great contrast – the burned areas come out dark brown against the light natural wood, so you get clear shades of gray that show the photo really well. The tight, even grain of hardwood like maple doesn't distract from the photo, so you get a clearer result. **Recommended settings for 10W A1 Mini:** 300-350 DPI, 25-35% power, 200-300 mm/s. ### 2. Bamboo Bamboo is another great choice. It's light-colored with a subtle grain, and it engraves cleanly. It's also sustainable, which many customers appreciate. It gives very similar results to maple. **Recommended settings:** Similar to maple – 300 DPI, 30-40% power, 200-300 mm/s. ### 3. Slate Slate gives you a really unique look – the laser removes the dark top layer, revealing lighter gray underneath. So you get negative of the image (light image on dark background), which looks really cool. Slate is great for plaques and coasters. **Recommended settings:** 300 DPI, 40-60% power, 150-250 mm/s. ### 4. Leather (Light Colors) Light-colored leather (especially veg-tan leather) can give really nice photo engravings. The dark burn contrasts well with the light leather. It's great for photo engravings on leather wallets or journals. **Recommended settings:** 300 DPI, 20-30% power, 300-400 mm/s. ### 5. Anodized Aluminum (Dark Colors) You can engrave photos on dark anodized aluminum – the laser removes the dark anodized layer, revealing the silver aluminum underneath, so you get a light image on a dark background. This looks really sharp for metal pet tags. **Recommended settings:** 300-400 DPI, 40-60% power, 150-250 mm/s. If you're just starting out, we recommend practicing on maple or birch plywood first. It's affordable, easy to work with, and gives great results. ## Step 4: Focus Correctly and Prepare Your Material Before you start engraving, make sure you do these important steps: 1. **Make sure your material is perfectly flat** – If your material is warped, some areas will be out of focus and the engraving will be blurry. For photo engraving, you really need everything perfectly in focus. 2. **Focus the laser correctly** – Use the focus gauge that came with your Tyvok laser to get the focus exactly right for your material thickness. This is even more important for photo engraving than for regular text or line art. If the focus is off, your photo will be blurry. 3. **Secure your material** – Make sure your material can't move during the engraving. Even a tiny movement will ruin your photo. Use double-sided tape or small clamps to hold it firmly in place on your **Tyvok engraving platform**. 4. **Do a test on scrap** – Always do a test engraving on a scrap piece of the same material before you engrave your good material. This lets you check that your settings are right and that your photo is prepared correctly. ## Step 5: Recommended Settings for 10W Tyvok Lasers Here are our recommended starting settings for photo engraving with a 10W **Tyvok A1 Mini** or **Tyvok P2**. These are starting points – you may need to tweak them slightly based on your specific material and the look you want. | Material | DPI | Power (%) | Speed (mm/s) | |----------|-----|-----------|--------------| | Light hardwood (maple, birch) | 300 | 25-35 | 200-300 | | Bamboo | 300 | 30-40 | 200-300 | | Plywood | 300 | 30-40 | 200-250 | | Slate | 300 | 40-60 | 150-250 | | Light leather | 300 | 20-30 | 300-400 | | Dark anodized aluminum | 300-400 | 40-60 | 150-250 | | Acrylic (frosted) | 300 | 30-40 | 200-300 | ### For the Tyvok P2 Galvo: Because the P2 is so much faster, you can use higher DPI for even more detail without it taking forever. Many users like to do 300-400 DPI on the P2 for really detailed photo engravings, and it still only takes a minute or two. ## Tips for Getting Better Photo Engravings Even if you follow all the steps, you might not get a perfect result on your first try. Here are some tips that will help you get better results: ### 1. Increase Contrast More Than You Think You Need To Most beginners don't increase the contrast enough. When you're preparing your photo, increase the contrast until it looks almost too much. That usually gives you the best result in the engraving. The laser naturally compresses the contrast a little bit, so starting with extra contrast gives you a better range of grays in the final engraving. ### 2. Use a Higher DPI for More Detail 300 DPI is the sweet spot for most photo engravings. If you have a really detailed photo and you want the maximum detail, you can go up to 400 DPI. It takes a little longer, but the extra detail can be worth it. Going higher than 400 DPI usually doesn't give you much improvement because the laser beam can't get any smaller than that. ### 3. Make Sure Your Honeycomb Platform is Clean and Flat A good **Tyvok engraving platform** keeps your material perfectly flat, which is essential for getting a sharp photo engraving where everything is in focus. If your material isn't flat, the focus changes across the surface, so some parts of the photo will be sharp and other parts will be blurry. ### 4. Clean the Lens Before You Start A dirty lens reduces your power, which can make your engraving too faint. Make sure your lens is clean before you start a photo engraving – this ensures you get consistent power across the whole engraving. ### 5. Try Different Dithering Settings LightBurn offers several different dithering options. If you don't like the result you get with Floyd-Steinberg, try Ordered Dithering. Different settings give different looks, and some materials work better with different dithering. ### 6. Sand Your Material Before Engraving If you're engraving wood, starting with a smoother sanded surface gives you a clearer result. Sand the surface with 220 grit or 400 grit sandpaper before you engrave, then wipe off all the dust. A smoother surface gives you sharper detail. ## Common Problems and How to Fix Them Here are the most common problems beginners have when engraving photos, and how to fix them: ### Problem: The engraving is too dark and you can't see the details **Causes and fixes:** - Your power is too high – lower the power by 5-10% and try again. - Your speed is too slow – increase the speed by 50-100 mm/s. - Your photo was already too dark to begin with – increase the brightness in the image adjustment step. ### Problem: The engraving is too faint and you can't see the details **Causes and fixes:** - Your power is too low – increase the power by 5-10%. - Your speed is too fast – decrease the speed by 50-100 mm/s. - Your lens is dirty – clean your lens and try again. - Your focus is wrong – re-focus the laser correctly. ### Problem: The engraving is blurry **Causes and fixes:** - Your focus is off – focus the laser again, make sure your material is flat. - Your material moved during engraving – secure it better next time. - Your belts are loose (on A1 Mini) – check the belt tension and retension if needed. - The original photo was blurry – start with a sharper photo. ### Problem: The contrast is bad and you can't see the image **Causes and fixes:** - You didn't increase the contrast enough when you prepared the image – go back and increase the contrast more. - You're using a wood with really dark grain that distracts from the image – try a lighter-colored wood with less grain. ## Why the Tyvok P2 is Great for Photo Engraving If you do a lot of photo engraving, you owe it to yourself to try the **Tyvok P2** galvo laser. Because it's so much faster than a gantry laser, you can do 300 or 400 DPI photo engravings and they're done in under a minute. On a gantry laser like the A1 Mini, the same photo would take 5-10 minutes. The P2 also has really good accuracy, so you get sharp, detailed photos just like you do on bigger, more expensive galvo lasers. And because the P2 is so affordable, you don't have to spend thousands of dollars to get galvo speed for your photo engravings. Many Tyvok owners use the A1 Mini for cutting out their blanks, then use the P2 for the photo engraving. That's a perfect combination – you get the cutting capability of the A1 Mini with the speed of the P2 for photo engraving. ## Final Tips for Beginners Photo engraving is one of the most impressive things you can do with a laser engraver, but it does take a little practice to get good at it. Don't get discouraged if your first few attempts don't turn out perfectly. Every laser is a little different, and every material is a little different, so it takes some practice to get the settings right for your particular setup. Start with simple photos, practice on cheap scrap material, and gradually work your way up to more complex photos. Before long, you'll be creating beautiful photo engravings that make amazing gifts that people will treasure. Whether you're doing photo engraving as a hobby or selling them as part of your business, a Tyvok laser gives you all the capability you need to get professional-quality results at an affordable price. Just remember to start with the right photo, prepare it correctly in your software, get the focus right, and do a test before you engrave your good material. --- *Just getting started with your Tyvok laser? Check out our [complete setup guide for the Tyvok A1 Mini](How-to-Set-Up-Your-Tyvok-A1-Mini-for-First-Time-2026.md) and make sure you have a quality [Tyvok engraving platform](Why-Every-Laser-Engraver-Needs-a-Quality-Tyvok-Engraving-Platform.md) to keep your material flat and get the sharpest results.* ## Related Articles - [Best Galvo Laser Engraver in 2026: Complete Guide](/blogs/news/best-galvo-laser-engraver-in-2026-the-complete-ultimate-guide) - [Tyvok P2 Review: Best Budget Galvo Laser Under $500](/blogs/news/is-the-tyvok-p2-10w-galvo-the-best-affordable-galvo-laser-engraver-in-2026) - [Can You Make Money with a Laser Engraving Business?](/blogs/news/can-you-make-money-with-a-laser-engraver-in-2026-realistic-profit-examples) - [Galvo vs Diode Laser: Which is Better for Beginners?](/blogs/news/galvo-vs-diode-laser-engraver-which-is-actually-better-for-beginners-in-2026) - [10 Most Profitable Laser Engraving Products to Sell](/blogs/news/10-most-profitable-products-to-sell-with-your-galvo-laser-engraver-in-2026)
Carrito 0

Su carrito está vacío.

Empieza a comprar