SM SpiderMake Make a test SVG

Start with a real job

Get a quick machine-fit recommendation

Choose the product, material, and batch size. Then start from the SVG tool and run one material test before buying, upgrading, or listing the product.

Good first product

Start with pet tags on coated metal

Use a small SVG batch first, test text contrast and hole placement, then decide whether the current machine is enough for repeat orders.

Recommended work area

80 x 80 mm is enough for one or a very small pet tag test. 400 x 400 mm is better for repeat batches.

First material test

Run a power and speed test card on the exact blank, then engrave one tag before a customer batch.

When to explore a laser

If small text is not readable or repeat batches take too long, compare machines by detail, work area, and repeatability.

Best-fit machine profile

Prioritize readable fine text, stable focus, repeatable positioning, and a work area that fits the expected batch.

Ask before buying

Can it mark the actual material, keep detail at final size, and repeat the same result across the batch?

Sales-ready note

Copy this machine-fit brief

Use this when asking TYVOK or a workflow partner which laser setup fits the product proof.

Create full brief Send workflow request

Machine question

Get an ecosystem workflow recommendation

Send the selected product, material, batch size, and machine-fit brief. Use this after you make or download one SVG sample, then ask which TYVOK or ecosystem partner setup is worth testing.

Open email instead

We save a local fallback in this browser and open an email draft if no form endpoint is connected.

Product paths

Product idea to machine capability

Each project below links the file-prep tool to the first machine test a user should run.

Pet tags prepared for laser engraving
Personalized gifts

Pet tags

Good first product because the customer value is clear: name, phone number, outline, and hole position.

  • Test small text contrast and hole alignment.
  • Check metal, acrylic, or leather blanks before listing.
  • Useful for compact galvo or desktop personalization workflows.
Wedding place card batch sample
Event batches

Wedding place cards

Best when users want larger batches from a guest list and need a workflow that avoids hand-placing every name.

  • Test work area, card size, edge quality, and batch time.
  • Check name legibility on the final material.
  • Useful when a larger bed or repeatable fixture saves time.
QR and serial labels prepared for laser marking
Shop workflow

QR and serial labels

Useful for tool rooms, storage bins, inventory, and asset tags where repeatable marking matters.

  • Test QR scanning after engraving.
  • Confirm serial text is readable at the final size.
  • Useful for comparing detail, speed, and repeat batch layout.
Logo engraving preparation workflow
Brand marking

Logo or photo prep

Good for users testing how a mark looks on packaging, coasters, signs, boxes, or sample boards.

  • Start with black-and-white artwork before chasing detail.
  • Compare contrast on wood, leather, acrylic, and coated metal.
  • Useful for deciding whether the machine can hold the detail you need.

Before buying or upgrading

Run one sample before trusting the workflow

A useful laser decision starts with a finished sample, not only a spec sheet. Prepare a file, import it, test the material, then compare whether the result matches the product you want to sell.

Work area

Does the machine fit the item or batch size you want?

Detail

Can small text, QR codes, and logos stay readable?

Material

Does the result look good on your actual blank or coated surface?

Repeatability

Can you make the same result again for customer orders?