![]() ![]() Click on the image file you want and drag it into the main window. You can then drag the image around, resize it, etc. The raster format is (annoyingly) the opposite of the laser cutter - the CarveWright treats Black as "no cutting" and White as "cut 0.8 inches deep" with intermediate grey shades as proportionately less cutting. (Our laser cutter treats black as "maximum laser power" and white as "no laser power"). You have to write the design onto a memory card (which is DRM'ed so you have to buy it from CarveWright) and stick it into the machine for cutting. Without the additional DXF or STL import software (which I guess we don't have), you have to use non-free software to generate the design as vector and raster data. The ONLY import mechanism is for image files (PNG would be best) - and that only allows for carving - not cutting. So bottom line is that if you want to do cutting/routing, you'll have to sit at whatever computer has the software installed on it to design the vector stuff - but for shallow (0.8") carving, you can work on your own machine with GIMP/Photoshop/whatever and then just import the image into their software and write to the memory card. #Carvewright patterns free downloads trial. ![]() #Carvewright patterns free downloads software. ![]()
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