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  • Members
Posted

hi,

i make personalised leathergoods and laser engrave a lot of things in leather.

Now i want to add colour in my laser engraving like gold or silver. So i can also engrave on darker leather.

Does anyone know how to do this?

I add a picture to show an example. I know for sure the example has been laser engraved because i saw a making of. But they did not show the total process.

I tried with angelus leatherpaint but that's not as slick as on the picture.

I hope someone can help me out, you would be a life saver!

ps: i asked the company of the picture how they do it but offcourse i didn't receive an answer :)

 

Regards,

Myrthe

Scherm­afbeelding 2023-11-29 om 09.38.29.jpg

  • Contributing Member
Posted

The simplest way I know of is to mask the leather completely, laser through it and spray the color you wish into the engrave, allow to dry to the touch then remove masking. It is important to allow the paint/ink to dry but not allowing the masking to remain for long time since some times there are small indentions in the leather that allow the spray to penetrate under the masking. Most of the time you can remove unwanted color from surface without damage to leather

A spray to seal the leather and the coloring used works best. If you apply a sealer with a cloth you will have the color migrating all over the place. I engrave leather by dampening the leather before engrave, results in better rendition.

Color on the engraved portions is tricky at best, practice on a piece of scrap.

  • Members
Posted
27 minutes ago, Ferg said:

The simplest way I know of is to mask the leather completely, laser through it and spray the color you wish into the engrave, allow to dry to the touch then remove masking. It is important to allow the paint/ink to dry but not allowing the masking to remain for long time since some times there are small indentions in the leather that allow the spray to penetrate under the masking. Most of the time you can remove unwanted color from surface without damage to leather

A spray to seal the leather and the coloring used works best. If you apply a sealer with a cloth you will have the color migrating all over the place. I engrave leather by dampening the leather before engrave, results in better rendition.

Color on the engraved portions is tricky at best, practice on a piece of scrap.

Thanks, Ferg

May God bless,

Dwight

  • Members
Posted
On 11/29/2023 at 11:08 PM, Ferg said:

The simplest way I know of is to mask the leather completely, laser through it and spray the color you wish into the engrave, allow to dry to the touch then remove masking. It is important to allow the paint/ink to dry but not allowing the masking to remain for long time since some times there are small indentions in the leather that allow the spray to penetrate under the masking. Most of the time you can remove unwanted color from surface without damage to leather

A spray to seal the leather and the coloring used works best. If you apply a sealer with a cloth you will have the color migrating all over the place. I engrave leather by dampening the leather before engrave, results in better rendition.

Color on the engraved portions is tricky at best, practice on a piece of scrap.

Thank you for your answer. I'll try that!

  • Members
Posted

Another untested thought... seal the leather with a resist.  Then burn your image through the sealant, and wipe the color over the image and wipe off, similar to how you'd apply an antique.     maybe?  

  • Members
Posted
1 hour ago, Littlef said:

Another untested thought... seal the leather with a resist.  Then burn your image through the sealant, and wipe the color over the image and wipe off, similar to how you'd apply an antique.     maybe?  

nice option as well.
With a resist, you mean something like a tape? Or a layer that i also can wipe off?

  • Members
Posted
4 hours ago, studiocroco said:

nice option as well.
With a resist, you mean something like a tape? Or a layer that i also can wipe off?

I was referring to a resist such as this image. Its used when antiquing leather.  It seals the leather so that antiquing gel only adheres to the areas that are tooled, and the antiquing gel will wipe back off of the portions of smooth leather.  It might work.... it might not.

619U+wrWsQL._AC_SL1200_.jpg

  • CFM
Posted

They probably used a technique called heat embossing which is pretty simple to do so they probably didn't want to tell. I have no idea if it would work with a laser.

Posted
5 hours ago, chuck123wapati said:

They probably used a technique called heat embossing which is pretty simple to do so they probably didn't want to tell. I have no idea if it would work with a laser.

@studiocroco It certainly looks like hot foil pressed image.  Once you have the equipment (a hot foil press) it is certainly faster and much easier to do than have to work through the various contortions listed above.

The hot foil presses often show up on local for sale FB and other sites.

 

  • Contributing Member
Posted

I think the OP was asking about how to do it with laser.

Of course it could be done with hot stamp press but he already has the laser. Lol

  • Members
Posted

Ive done it both ways Mask and resist  I like the resist way better because you don't have all the weeding problems you have with a mask.

Posted
21 hours ago, Ferg said:

I think the OP was asking about how to do it with laser.

Of course it could be done with hot stamp press but he already has the laser. Lol

So what is wrong with offering other possible solutions or suggestions?

  • Contributing Member
Posted

Not a doggone thing. For crying out loud! I was simply suggesting that if he didn't have a hot press but obviously does have a laser, it would be more economical.

 

And I thought I was edgy.

  • CFM
Posted
15 hours ago, Ferg said:

 

 

And I thought I was edgy.

No your Fergy , grumpy retired and sleepy, dopey and bashful didn't put in for the job so docs cousin edgy got it.

But back on topic I've not heard of doing that with a laser nor was I able to find anything on the subject. His second question "Does anyone know how to do this?" and the pictures are what i was referring to. 

  • Contributing Member
Posted
12 hours ago, Sheilajeanne said:

Ferg, how do you do the blocking? What do you use?

For a cheap ? option you can use masking tape. Sometimes the blue tape for painting is okay. I usually have both on hand if the less sticky doesn't stay put. Roll it down good on the leather, laser, spray color, let dry, remove tape. Don't allow the tape to stay on leather for too long. Just enough for the paint/ink to dry.

  • Members
Posted

Thanks for all the reply's!

They have several movies where it shows that's it's done by laser. As you can see here: https://www.instagram.com/reel/Co9vv-Vj3sn/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link&igshid=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==

So it's certainly not done by embossing. I also have a small embossing machine at home but for every customised item you have to make a mall. That would be to expensive.

But i'll try several things and looks what works best!


 


 

 

  • Members
Posted
1 hour ago, studiocroco said:

Thanks for all the reply's!

They have several movies where it shows that's it's done by laser. As you can see here: https://www.instagram.com/reel/Co9vv-Vj3sn/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link&igshid=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==

So it's certainly not done by embossing. I also have a small embossing machine at home but for every customised item you have to make a mall. That would be to expensive.

But i'll try several things and looks what works best!


 

You might try and reach out to the person who made the videos, and ask them.  The only video I saw in the link showed the laser burning the leather, and then a final picture of it colored.  I didn't see anything showing that the laser actually coloring the etching.    I have no theories on how a laser could accomplish that.  Elfin Magic.  
 

 

 

  • Members
Posted

that's correct.
I found several videos of the lasering but not what happens after. And that is why i am so curious.  It is lasered, but what after that? :) 

I reached out to the company but offcourse they wouldn't give me an answer...

  • Members
Posted
42 minutes ago, studiocroco said:

that's correct.
I found several videos of the lasering but not what happens after. And that is why i am so curious.  It is lasered, but what after that? :) 

I reached out to the company but off course they wouldn't give me an answer...

My guess, for what it's worth, is that the laser is not what is coloring the leather.  I did a quick google, and found some industrial manufacturing lasers that can etch metal and glass with some sort of coloring process included, but I found no references to being able to do that to leather.  Nor have I ever heard of laser type machine being marketed with that ability.  I wind up in the same place.  I got nothing.

  • Members
Posted

thanks for the research.
i also guess that the laser does nothing but engraving ;)

So we will try some things with paint, spray, resist,...

Posted

Just for weird knowledge. There is a hack to do color with a laser and powder-coat resins, but not something I'd do on leather.

 

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