PNG/JPG to SVG for laser cutting
Create cleaner vector paths for laser cut, score, and engrave projects
This converter turns PNG or JPG artwork into SVG vector paths for laser cutter workflows. Use cut-line mode for outlines, score-line mode for guide marks, and engrave-fill mode when you want filled vector shapes for marking or engraving.
It works best with simple high-contrast artwork: logos, silhouettes, signs, ornaments, labels, stencils, templates, acrylic shapes, wood cutouts, cardstock designs, and maker projects.
Best for laser-prep vector paths
This page creates traced SVG paths from raster artwork. It is useful for laser cutting outlines, scoring guide paths, and filled engrave shapes. It does not set your machine power, speed, kerf, material thickness, or origin. Always test your SVG in your laser software before cutting expensive material.
Not every PNG becomes a clean cut file automatically. Treat the output as a path review starting point: inspect small islands, enclosed holes, stroke or fill intent, and path count before using the design with laser software or real materials.
Best laser uses
How to convert PNG to SVG for laser cutting
Upload → choose laser preset → tune paths → download SVG- 1Upload a PNG or JPG designUse clean, high-contrast artwork when possible. Simple shapes, logos, icons, stencils, and silhouettes trace better than busy photos.
- 2Choose a laser presetStart with Clean Outline for general cutting, Engrave Filled Logo for filled shapes, or Score Line when you need guide paths.
- 3Pick cut, score, or engrave outputCut and score modes export stroked paths with no fill. Engrave mode exports filled vector shapes.
- 4Tune cleanup and smoothnessUse threshold, turd size, curve tolerance, and turn policy to reduce speckles, remove tiny fragments, and smooth rough traces.
- 5Check the SVG in your laser softwareImport the SVG into your laser cutter software and assign power, speed, material, kerf, and operation settings there.
Laser settings explained
Cut line and score line create stroked paths with no fill. Engrave fill creates filled shapes.
Controls preview thickness for cut and score paths. Your laser software may use its own line-width rules.
Controls what becomes vector material. Higher includes lighter pixels; lower keeps only darker, stronger shapes.
Removes small speckles and dust that can become unwanted tiny cut paths.
Higher values simplify paths and smooth curves. Lower values keep more detail but may create heavier SVGs.
Useful for drawings or rough artwork when you want outlines instead of filled regions.
Important laser expectation
This converter prepares SVG geometry only. It does not know your machine, material, lens, kerf, power, speed, pass count, air assist, or bed setup. Use the SVG as a starting point, then configure the real laser settings inside your laser cutter software.
Craft workflow
PNG to SVG for Laser Cutting: practical workflow notes
Convert PNG artwork into SVG files for laser cutting, engraving prep, outlines, and cut paths. Use this page when that specific output is the fastest path, then jump to the related tools below if you need a different export, cleanup, or craft-file workflow.
Best for
- png to svg for laser cutting
- Cricut Design Space prep
- Vinyl decals, stickers, labels, stencils, and maker files
- US creator, classroom, Etsy, and small-business craft workflows
Settings to try
- Start with clean cut, vinyl, sticker, or layered presets.
- Use Click to Convert settings for threshold, cleanup, and trace detail.
- Use Live Preview edits for layer colors, opacity, visibility, copy, and download checks.
Useful limits
- These tools help prepare SVGs but cannot guarantee every cutter or material result.
- Very small islands, noisy photos, and busy backgrounds may need manual cleanup.
- Cricut is a trademark of its owner; iLoveSVG is not affiliated with Cricut.
Related tools
Need help choosing?
Read the concise workflow, preset, settings, and troubleshooting docs without adding clutter to the converter.
FAQ
Does this create a laser-ready SVG?
It creates vector SVG paths suitable for import into laser software. You still need to assign cut, score, or engrave operations and machine settings in your laser program.
Should I use cut line or engrave fill?
Use cut line for outlines and shapes you want the laser to follow. Use engrave fill when you want filled vector regions for marking or engraving.
Does it preserve image colors?
No. This page is for traced laser paths. Use color only as a path preview or operation cue. It is not a full-color vectorizer.
Why did tiny details disappear?
The cleanup settings remove small fragments that usually become bad laser paths. Lower turd size and curve tolerance if those details matter.
Is this tied to a specific laser brand?
No. iLoveSVG is an independent SVG utility site. Always verify import behavior in your own laser software.
