Soccer Frenzy
Here is the completed hand drawn soccer field artwork. The balls were challenging because of the tiny hexagonal-like shapes; I used a PIGMA Micron 0.1 mm fine tipped pen for those tight spaces.
Soccer Frenzy
Here is the completed hand drawn soccer field artwork. The balls were challenging because of the tiny hexagonal-like shapes; I used a PIGMA Micron 0.1 mm fine tipped pen for those tight spaces.
Soccer
Here is the the colored outline of the original design plus photos of the final cuts. The laser was operating smoothly and the run took about 5 minutes. Again as for the hockey stencil, I found no charring, cracking or splintering on the edge or back sides of the plexiglass. This will make for a smoother trace with the pens.
It does not really affect the usage, but you'll notice some areas in the bottom photos where blobs of melted then hardened plexiglass are scattered around. In one case a polygon from the one of the larger soccer balls has its outline engraved in. The best explanation I can give is that the laser was set at power levels higher then I needed, and smaller hot pieces (or the beam itself) reached the larger shapes that had previously fallen into the catch tray.
Soccer field with balls, cleats, goals and markings |
Hockey artwork completed
I took about 3.5 hours and produced the following final piece.
The pens used were:
Sakura Gelly Roll Classic Red M19, Blue M36, Black M49
Sakura Gelly Roll Metallic Gold M551, Blue M536, Green M526, Red M519, Silver M553
Signo Black
PIGMA fine tip red, blue, green and purple
The PIGMA fine tips were used for the goalie mask, the smaller crossing hockey sticks and the face off inner circles.
Hockey Stencil Cut and sketch booked
The lasers have been moved into their own dedicated room separate from the woodshop and metal working/welding area which makes for a better temperature controlled, quieter and cleaner work environment. Seth also recently recalibrated and cleaned the lasers after the renovation of the makerspace in early August and I enjoyed very clean cuts at low powers with no charring, burning or microcracking on the back side of the stencil. Notice that I am now using a light purple tape which is low tack/delicate removal 3M brand painter's tape (60 safe removal period). The run took almost 6 minutes to complete using 20 different layers, my most complex design to date.
Today I completed my coloring plan in my sketch book and next up is to actually do the drawing on 130 lb white cardstock. I toyed with the idea of using a wide 18 kt gold brush stroke to frame the hockey scene but decided against it because so many of the hockey objects are small and thin and the broad reflective strokes might clash with that fine detail.