How to Make Rubber Stamps with a CO₂ Laser

Rubber stamp laser settings (4–6 mm): speed ranges by wattage, depth target, mirroring, cleaning, mounting, and troubleshooting for crisp prints.

Rubber stamps are one of the best CO₂ laser projects for makers, craft sellers, print shops, and hobbyists. With the right rubber sheet and laser settings, you can create professional-quality stamps for packaging, scrapbooking, journaling, branding, and small-batch production.

This guide covers everything you need to know — from 4–6 mm rubber settings to file setup, engraving depth, cleaning, mounting, and inking techniques.

  • ✅ For 60–150 W CO₂ lasers
  • ✅ Covers 4–6 mm rubber stamp settings
  • ✅ Includes workflow + cleaning + mounting
  • ✅ Beginner-friendly + workshop-grade detail

Quick Answer

CO₂ lasers are excellent for producing rubber stamps:

  • Use 4–6 mm rubber sheets
  • Engrave depth: ~1.2–1.8 mm
  • Mirror the design before engraving
  • Use honeycomb + strong exhaust
  • Clean dust before mounting
Must-do: Mirror your artwork before engraving — otherwise the stamp will print reversed!

Material Selection — Best Rubber for Laser

Not all rubber behaves the same. Use laser rubber whenever possible — it cuts cleaner, smells less, and produces crisp edges.

Material Workability Notes
Laser rubber (recommended) ✅ Very good Clean, low smoke, ideal for stamping
Natural rubber ✅ Good More smell; darker edges
Synthetic rubber △ Varies Quality depends on formulation

Recommended thickness: 4–6 mm (4 mm for basic stamps; 6 mm for deeper impression + durability)

The speed ranges below are based on actual CO₂ laser test data. Always tune ±20% depending on your material brand, humidity, and exhaust setup.

4 mm Rubber Stamp Settings

Power Best Speed Notes
60 W ~5–10 mm/s Good entry level
80 W ~8–15 mm/s Clean edges
100 W ~15–20 mm/s Crisp result
150 W ~25–30 mm/s Fastest + cleanest

6 mm Rubber Stamp Settings

Power Best Speed Notes
80 W ~5–10 mm/s Acceptable
100 W ~7–12 mm/s Good detail
150 W ~9–15 mm/s Best balance

Engraving depth target: ~1.2–1.8 mm (Deeper than 2 mm = loses detail + harder to clean)

Resolution: 300–600 dpi → 400–600 dpi preferred for fine line artwork.

10-Minute Dial-In: Make Your Own “Best Settings” Fast

Even with good starting ranges, rubber brands and exhaust setups vary. The fastest way to lock in your “best” settings is a small test card that lets you see depth + edge quality side-by-side.

  1. Pick one thickness (4 mm or 6 mm) and one art style (fine lines vs bold shapes).
  2. Duplicate a 20–30 mm square stamp patch (simple logo/text + a few thin lines).
  3. Run 4–6 test patches by changing only one variable at a time:
    • Start at the “Best Speed” range above, then test slightly faster and slightly slower.
    • Keep DPI within 400–600 for fine art, and re-test if you change DPI later.
  4. Choose the winner by two KPIs: (1) grooves look clean (not melted/rounded), (2) stamp prints crisp after cleaning.
  5. Record the final combo (speed + DPI + material thickness + exhaust notes). That becomes your “house setting” for that rubber brand.
Tip: Crisp printing depends more on clean grooves than engraving depth. If prints look soft, verify cleaning first before chasing deeper engraving.

Artwork Preparation

Rubber stamps are a “raised-surface workflow” — meaning you engrave everything except what prints.

  • Convert artwork to black/white
  • Mirror the artwork (horizontal flip)
  • Fill black = engrave
  • White = raised print surface
  • Set small outline offset if needed
Important: Mirror → Engrave → Ink → Print

Optional: Add a Ramp/Shoulder for Cleaner Stamping

If your design has lots of fine text, isolated “islands,” or thin lines, adding a subtle shoulder (ramp) around the printing surfaces can improve durability and reduce smudging. Conceptually, you create a gentle transition from raised surface to the engraved background instead of a perfectly vertical wall.

  • When it helps: tiny text, thin strokes, large stamps, or stamps that will be pressed hard.
  • Where to do it: in your stamp design workflow (some tools call this “shoulder,” “ramp,” or “relief”).
  • How to validate: run one ramp vs one non-ramp test and compare print sharpness and edge stability.

Step-by-Step Workflow

  1. Download / prepare artwork
  2. Mirror the design
  3. Place rubber sheet on honeycomb
  4. Turn on strong exhaust
  5. Raster engrave (~1.2–1.8 mm depth)
  6. Optional: Cut outline to separate the stamp
  7. Clean dust and ash
  8. Mount to block / acrylic
  9. Ink test → adjust pressure

Cleaning & Processing

Rubber engraving leaves powdery debris in the engraved channels — cleaning is critical for clear stamping.

  • Use stiff brush + water/soap
  • Rinse & dry fully
  • Compressed air works great
  • Light alcohol wipe optional

Crisp printing depends more on clean grooves than engraving depth.

Mounting Your Stamp

  • Use wood block / acrylic block / handle
  • Use permanent adhesive
  • Add printed label on the back for alignment
Tip: Crystal acrylic bases are popular for modern, clean stamp designs.

Inking & Printing Tips

  • Test with dye / pigment ink
  • Clean stamp before switching colors
  • Apply uniform pressure

For fine text or linework → pigment ink gives sharper edges.

Troubleshooting

Issue Cause Fix
Edges look fuzzy Too shallow Engrave deeper (~1.5 mm)
Burn marks Speed too low Increase speed
Fine detail lost DPI too low Use 400–600 dpi
Grooves filled w/ dust No cleaning Brush + air
Print looks reversed Not mirrored Mirror artwork

Safety Notes

  • Use strong exhaust
  • Do NOT cut PVC rubber (toxic fumes) — see: Do NOT Laser Cut PVC
  • Wear PPE while cleaning ash
  • Never leave machine unattended

FAQ

Q: Can a 60 W CO₂ laser make rubber stamps?
Yes — 4 mm rubber works well at ~5–10 mm/s.

Q: How deep should I engrave?
~1.2–1.8 mm is ideal.

Q: Do I need to mirror?
Yes. Must mirror before engraving.

Q: Why is my print blurry?
Likely not deep enough or not cleaned properly.

Conclusion

Rubber stamps are an excellent CO₂ laser project — inexpensive, fun, customizable, and commercially valuable. With the correct settings and cleaning workflow, you can produce crisp, professional stamps for branding, packaging, crafts, invitations, or small-run production.

Start with:

  • 4–6 mm laser rubber
  • Engrave ~1.5 mm deep
  • Mirror the design
  • Use strong exhaust
  • Brush clean before use

If you like “tested settings + practical fixes,” these guides pair well with rubber stamps (airflow, engraving control, and material safety):

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