- Click the link below to download the .zip file for the Wood Photo Engraving Macro, then unzip the file. Instructions for installation are included with the download, and are located at the bottom of this page.
How to Process a Photo for Laser Engraving on Wood
- Open the photo for laser engraving on wood in CorelDRAW, then resize and crop the photo to the final size you are going to engrave.
- With your photo imported and selected in CorelDRAW, open the Resampling Palette by selecting Bitmaps/Resample from the drop down menu.
- In the Resample Palette, change the DPI to 600, and then click OK.
- Now the real fun begins! There are 4 different CorelDRAW effects/filters we are going to apply to the photo.
- Gamma
- Unsharp Mask
- Sharpen
- Convert to Black & White (1-bit) with Halftone Dither
- Gamma Adjustment Filter: The Gamma filter allows you reveal detail in the low-contrasting areas of a photo without significantly affecting the shadows or highlights.
- Unsharp Mask Filter: This filter accentuates edge detail and focus blurred areas in the photo without removing low-frequency areas. Low-frequency areas are the areas in a photo with subtle or smooth tonal changes – a good example is a portrait photo.
- Sharpening: The Sharpen filter accentuates the edges of the photo by focusing on blurred areas and increasing the contrast between neighboring pixels. The result creates greater contrasted edges in the photo.
- Convert to Black & White (1-bit) Photo (Halftone Dither): When a photo is converted to a Black and White photo, each pixel in the photo is either converted to black or white. There are different types of dithering patterns applied to black and white photos: Halftone, Line Art, Ordered, Jarvis, Stucki, Floyd-Steinberg, and Cardinality-Distribution. When engraving a photograph on wood, a Halftone dither works best. A Halftone dither tricks the eye into seeing different shades of gray by varying the pattern and density of black and white pixels in a photo. When applying a Halftone dither, we are able to vary the screen type, angle for the halftone, lines per unit, and the unit of measure.
- The only thing left is to print to your Epilog Laser system!
How to install the Wood Photo Macro for CorelDRAW
- Click the button below, to download the .zip file for the Wood Photo Engraving Macro, then unzip the file
- Next, open the CorelDRAW GMS folder for your version of CorelDRAW (X5 – 2018). To open the GMS folder copy the folder address below that matches your version of CorelDRAW, and paste it into a Windows folder browser window.
Note: If you are having an issue installing the macro you may need to run the repair process to correct your version of CorelDRAW and install the Visual Basic Application tools which runs the macros within CorelDRAW. You’ll need the original disc or downloaded install file to run the repair process.
CorelDRAW X5:
C:Users%USERPROFILE%AppDataRoamingCorelCorelDRAW Graphics Suite X5DrawGMSCorelDRAW X6:
C:Users%USERPROFILE%AppDataRoamingCorelCorelDRAW Graphics Suite X6DrawGMSCorelDRAW X7:
C:Users%USERPROFILE%AppDataRoamingCorelCorelDRAW Graphics Suite X7DrawGMSCorelDRAW X8:
C:Users%USERPROFILE%AppDataRoamingCorelCorelDRAW Graphics Suite X8DrawGMS - Copy the Photo_Wood_EpilogLaser.gmsfile from the unzipped folder into the CorelDRAW GMS folder.
To check that the installation worked start CorelDRAW, open the Macro Manager (Windows/Dockers/Macro Manager or Alt + Shift + F11), and you should now see the Wood Photo Macro in the Macro Manager.
To use the Macro, select the photo you would like to process and in the Macro Manager select the macro and double click or push the play button near the bottom of the Macro Manager.