


Lightburn will accept a full-color image, but will process it as gray scale.LightBurn can be used to etch raster images (jpg, png, bmp, etc) with some caveats:

123d Make can generate slices from 3D models that can be assembled into 3D objects (N cost, but not open source and no Linux support).GIMP can be used to create etch designs only.
INKSCAPE LASER CUTTING FREE
It's like the 100% free and open source cousin of Adobe Photoshop.
INKSCAPE LASER CUTTING SOFTWARE
GNU Image Manipulation Program (GIMP) is photo-editing software for creating or modifying raster images (jpg, png, bmp, etc).Inkscape can be used to create designs that can include both etches and cuts in a single file. It's like the 100% free and open source cousin of Adobe Illustrator. Inkscape is illustration software for creating or modifying vector images.That's in a way behavior as expected, but there should be some way to convert a hairline into dashes.The Lightburn software is great for interfacing to the laser cutter and has basic drawing tools, but you are generally better of doing your designs in dedicated design software. Line becomes visible but line styling is gone What happened?Ĭan't dash the line after changing to hairlines. style the line as a non-scaling hairline (dimensionless, viewable at any zoom level).Note that the dashing style can still be selected on the line styling pane Line does not show up because the page is large and the line is too thin Not that for laser cutting applications, long lines usually disappear unless selected: create a now large format file (I usually create a 2000mm x 2000mm canvas for laser projects).So that leaves us with a very nice feature (hairlines) that isn't usable for dashed lines. I've disabled all the stroke style settings that don't make sense for hairlines: dashes and markers are scaled by the stroke width, which is logically zero units wide, so that doesn't work, and corners and caps don't really make sense when hairlines are always rendered at the device's smallest resolution. However, true hairlines are dimensionless and non-scaling, which means that line styling for dashes (which are proportional to the line width in SVG) don't make sense - and in fact aren't supported by inkscape!846 (merged)):
INKSCAPE LASER CUTTING SERIES
In some applications (for example, when making cardboard boxes, but also for some kinds of processing markup) there is the need to convert a line into a series of dashes.

Now that we have hairlines, there is the need to support some way to create dashed lines for cutting & folding. The reasoning was already discussed before (more info on the merge request for hairlines (see inkscape!846 (merged)). The best way to represent lines for laser cutting is to style them as hairlines. A few improvements can still be made to make it work better for the preparation of files for manufacturing (mainly laser cutting, but it's also useful for CNC or plotter). There was a discussion on Twitter yesterday regarding the creation of dashed lines for laser cutters where came to help and pointed some already existing improvements that are going to be in the 1.1 release soon.
