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Barnsley College Christmas Fair

Personalised laser-cut wooden Iyla bauble by LaserSister - Kay Vincent 20251205

Many thanks to Barnsley College, for inviting me to have a stall at their Christmas fair this week. I met lots of lovely students and staff, and since then I’ve been working on getting orders ready for their personalised wooden Christmas baubles.

Here is the latest bauble that I’ve cut so far today:

Personalised laser-cut wooden Iyla bauble by LaserSister - Kay Vincent 20251205

… and this is me boxing it up, ready to send off this afternoon. (Woo, get me with my TikTok ‘boxing-up’ videos!)

@lasersister.com

🎄 Boxing up a personalised “IYLA” bauble, ready to send off 🎁 LaserSister (Kay Vincent) #mumsoftiktok #crafttok #familychristmas #christmas2025 #Barnsley

♬ 风铃心愿 – Bythoven

In the meantime my letter baubles are creeping up the Amazon charts this December…

Screenshot of LaserSister's laser-cut Christmas bauble at #2 in an Amazon category

… but I’m thinking back to 2023, when I reached #1 on Amazon :

LaserSister's lasercut personalised wooden baubles are at #1 in Amazon's handmade ornaments category

That was on the 11th of December, so I might even beat that date, this year…?

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New Baby Keepsake Gift

Laser cut Millie wooden baby keepsake heart shaped gift woodcut by LaserSister (Kay Vincent)

This is the latest piece I’ve been commissioned to make – a ‘new baby’ keepsake gift. It’s a laser-cut wooden heart with the baby’s name and date of birth, and I’ve also spelled out the baby’s name in the little wooden blocks. The customer who commissioned it requested “NO STORKS!”, so I’ve created a stork-free design:

Laser cut Millie wooden baby keepsake heart shaped gift woodcut by LaserSister (Kay Vincent)

(No idea why there are fuzzy bits in the image. Maybe I need to clean the phone’s camera lenses. Anyway, you get the idea.)

I tried to incorporate lots of baby-themed elements but without being too sickly sweet. See how many you can spot! (Did I miss any traditional baby-related themes? You can use the comments section below to let me know what I should add next time.)

(And is it just me, or does that dummy look like it’s got eyes and a smiling mouth?!)

I like the filigree-type feel of this design. It feels a bit more special and delicate than just etching a design or message onto a solid sheet of wood.

I think it also has elements in common with some of my other work, like the wedding heart woodcut

Lasercut Wedding Heart Woodcut - LaserSister Kay Vincent

That wedding heart is now on my TikTok shop, but I still need to upload the new baby keepsake gift woodcut to the TT shop.

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Filigree Valentine Heart Woodcut

Filigree Valentine heart woodcut by LaserSister - Kay Vincent

Following on from yesterday’s papercut Valentine heart design, I have now cut the same design, to get a filigree Valentine heart woodcut:

Filigree Valentine heart woodcut by LaserSister - Kay Vincent

Here is a YouTube video of me cutting it with the laser machine (an Epilog Fusion Edge).

I’m really pleased with how these look – either as papercuts or from wood, and at small or large scale.

In fact, I’m so pleased with the design that I’m going to put it for sale on my shop. Woohoo! Or rather, Woo Commerce!

While cutting this I was listening to the audiobook of Joanna Penn’s newly-released “How to Write Non-Fiction” (second edition). There are a LOT of useful tips in there, which I will hopefully be putting into practice later this year. I am feeling very creative at the moment, and so 2025 seems like I might be able to plan ahead far enough to actually start achieving some goals.

I’ve got loads of projects and designs that I’m working on, so I hope they all turn out as well as this design. This is what the filigree hearts look like when they’ve been cut out and are hanging up on a wall:

Filigree Valentine heart woodcut by LaserSister Kay Vincent

Do you like the design? Could I improve it? Let me know in the comments below!

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Non-Mushy Valentine Card

non-mushy valentine card

For people who don’t like the yucky sentiments of standard Valentine’s Day cards, here is an experimental version of a non-mushy Valentine card. This is another laser-cut card, cut by my Epilog Fusion Edge machine.

It’s got all of the twiddly filigree bits of a laser-cut card, but without the saccharine sentiment 🙂

"You're weird but I like you" non-mushy Valentine card

Although now that I think about it, I didn’t put any particularly sweet sentiments on my personalised letter ‘A’ card, either. Maybe I’ll try to come up with a non-heart version next, to make it as unsentimental as possible. That would be the ultimate non-mushy Valentine card 😀

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AI Assisted Artwork #10 Yorkshire Rose Card

chatgpt yorkshire rose card 20240508

As mentioned previously, I’ve declared that one of my creative goals for 2024 is to create at least 52 AI assisted/inspired artworks this year, using AI-generated images as a prompt for actual physical creative pieces. My most recent piece is a Yorkshire Rose card.

Using ChatGPT’s DALL-E, I gave it a prompt:

Please try to create a papercut greetings card of a Yorkshire Rose.

This is what it came up with on the first attempt:

As usual, my first reaction was “WOW”. But then my follow-up reaction was the realisation that:

1) these designs wouldn’t be very easy to recreate as physical objects, and

2) they were just white roses, rather than actual Yorkshire roses.

…so I had to try to teach DALL-E what a Yorkshire Rose was:

Thanks – those are lovely but they are just white roses rather than specifically Yorkshire roses. The Yorkshire rose is a traditional emblem of Yorkshire in the UK. It is usually shown as having 5 white inner petals and 5 white outer petals – usually with leaves in between the 5 outer petals. It is similar to a Tudor rose, but with all-white petals instead of some petals being red.

Here are the results:

Now we were getting somewhere! For some reason I wanted to create a card that actually said “Yorkshire” on it. So I asked DALL-E to include “Yorkshire” under the rose emblem. This fifth attempt was OK, but again would have been difficult to directly create as a physical card…

DALL-E 20240507 Yorkshire rose card fifth attempt

…but the sixth attempt was excellent (with – of course – the exception being that DALL-E mis-spelled the only word I’d asked it to include):

DALL-E 20240507 Yorkshire rose card sixth attempt

Bingo! I instantly loved this design, but there was still a lot of work to do before I could cut it out:

  • Obviously I needed to correct the spelling.
  • Some areas wouldn’t work as papercuts because they weren’t attached to any other parts of the card, so I needed to adapt them.
  • Because of the shadows in the image, I would need to create the image as several layers.

Creating the physical design

This time I opened the Linearity Curve image software, and drew lines around the elements of the design so I could create an SVG file to cut with my laser cutter. I cut it with the laser because I thought I might not be accurate enough if I did it by hand.

Here is the original image on the left, with my physical version of the card on the right:

How well did DALL-E follow my prompts?

As mentioned above, the AI image generator initially didn’t know what a Yorkshire Rose was. However, once I’d explained the concept it did an amazing job… although then it let itself down again by mis-spelling a specific word. The papercut element was great, though. So on the whole I’ll give DALL-E 8/10.

How close is the physical version to the original AI design?

I’m going to give myself 83%. The differences are:

  • I changed “YORKSHHIRE” to “YORKSHIRE”
  • I had to link some of the ‘orphaned’ design elements to other parts of the design so that they wouldn’t fall out when I cut them.
  • I couldn’t get the shadows/lighting the same as in the original image. (Some of the shadows seem difficult/impossible to achieve in the physical version, so I didn’t make too much of an effort trying to get them exactly right.)
  • To get the right-looking thickness of paper I had to use watercolour card rather than paper, but that’s got a bit more of a creamy colour than the bright paper of the original image.
  • The laser made brown marks on the edges of the card, so again I haven’t been able to match the brightness of the original image.

Elements where I just left the AI design and didn’t make any changes:

  • The shapes of the leaves and the rose.
  • The shapes of the individual letters.

Lessons learned

  1. When making a layered papercut, even if the pieces have already been cut out by laser it can still take a long time to position the pieces correctly so they can be glued into place.
  2. (Solution to point (1) above:) If it’s tricky to position the layers of designs on top of each other, etch the positions onto the backs of the other paper pieces. For example, I etched the outline of the leafy piece onto the back of the large rose piece. This made it much quicker to accurately glue the leaves into place.

Things I still need to learn or improve

  1. Is there a quicker way to automatically (but accurately) convert the JPG image into SVG shapes? I tried to use Curve’s ‘Autotrace’ function, but it wasn’t very accurate so I decided to draw around most of the shapes by hand (using an Apple pencil).
  2. If I get chance later, I might try to match the shadows more accurately, and maybe also try to cut from a thinner, whiter paper or card.

Homework:

  1. Create a specific Barnsley version of the card/artwork.
  2. Create a version with no text.
  3. Try to cut from thinner, whiter paper/card.

Thanks for reading this post. If you’ve got any suggestions of prompts or projects – or if you’ve been experimenting yourself with AI-assisted images – I’d love to hear about them. You can either comment below or send me a message via the Contact form.

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AI Assisted Artwork #7: Papercut Birthday Card for my Dad

laser cut plane birthday card for dad - Kay Vincent - LaserSister 20240430

Continuing with my ongoing project of “An AI made me do it”, this latest mission was a great excuse to use AI to generate an image that I could then turn into a physical object. I needed a birthday card for my dad, and I wondered if AI would be able to help me. Normally I like to do papercut cards for family and friends, so this project became “Papercut birthday card for my dad”.

I logged into ChatGPT/DALL-E, and gave it the prompt:

Birthday card papercut saying “Happy Birthday Dad”.

DALL-E dad birthday card  - Kay Vincent - LaserSister 20240422-1330

As a first attempt, I thought this was amazing. DALL-E even added an envelope! I was impressed that most of the design could actually work as a papercut. There were very few isolated elements that would fall out if they were cut exactly as shown. However, there was a confusing section near the middle of the design where two elements were layered together (the snail or spiral on top of a flower shape).

At the same time, DALL-E also created this card…:

DALL-E dad birthday card  - Kay Vincent - LaserSister 20240422-1331

…which I would have immediately tried to cut out – if only it didn’t very clearly say “THUD” right in the middle. What on earth?!

So having discovered that DALL-E knew what a papercut birthday card looked like, I gave it another prompt:

“Great! Please could you include some little light aircraft in the image?”

At first sight these were amazing again, but:

  • they both had non-standard spellings of “Birthday”,
  • The left card was almost impossible to turn into a card without a lot of work,
  • Most of the planes didn’t look feasible as 2D paper objects.

Try, try again…

As usual, just when I thought that the AI was going to produce a fantastic result with the next image, we ended up having a fight instead. It either mis-spelled words (including “Dad”!), or presented the image at a sloping distorted angle, or came up with a design that would be impractical as a papercut.

Also as usual, the designs were nearly right, not really right. Here are some of the rejects:

In the end I just had to pick one that looked possible to cut without many adjustments:

DALL-E papercut dad birthday card - Kay Vincent - LaserSister

I printed it out on a normal piece of printer paper, then used that printout as a cutting template.

Here is the hand-cut version that I produced first:

Papercut plane birthday card for dad - Kay Vincent - LaserSister 20240305

…but then I continued to work on a laser-cut version. To do that I used Linearity Curve, which has an ‘auto trace’ function. Auto trace converts JPG files (i.e. photos) into vector graphics (i.e. collections of flat shapes). Auto trace sometimes makes little errors with the shapes (but is still way faster than tracing around the images by hand), so afterwards I edited the nodes of the vector shapes to try to get them to match the original image a bit better:

auto trace then editing nodes of plane 20240430
(The little white dots on the plane are nodes that can be moved around.)

…and here is the physical laser-cut version (on the right), next to the original AI design:

How well did the AI follow my prompts?

I would say about 8/10, for this project. Very successful! Most of the designs looked like papercut birthday cards. And all of them (when requested) contained light aircraft. However – as mentioned several times before in this ongoing series of projects – creative spelling was the opposite of useful or helpful.

How close is the physical version to the original AI design?

I’m going to say it’s about 85%. The differences are:

  • I didn’t cut out all of the sections that were cut out in the original design – I just etched them instead.
  • I changed the tail section because if I’d cut it out then lots of the pieces would just have dropped out. (Also, the stripe extends forward from the tail, which doesn’t look quite right.)
  • Some of the swirly bits have been simplified.
  • I couldn’t find any dark green card or paper to mount the plane on, so I chose a speckled dark blue piece instead.
  • The letters in the “Happy Birthday” banner had to be converted into stencil-type letters (otherwise the central sections of the As, Ps, B, D and R would have dropped out).

The elements where I just left the AI design and didn’t make any changes:

  • The outline of the plane
  • The design of the banners.

Lessons learned

ChatGPT is great at papercut birthday card designs.

Things I still need to learn or improve

Actually I’m pretty pleased with this project. Even the ‘duds’ had lots of elements in them that I felt could be used in future projects.


Homework:

  1. Convert at least three of the AI’s original designs into actual cards.

Thanks for reading this post. If you’ve got any suggestions of prompts – or if you’ve been experimenting yourself with AI-generated images – I’d love to hear about them. You can either comment below or send me a message via the Contact form.

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AI Assisted Artwork #6: Rose and Skull Fabric

Roses and skulls fabric from Maake - Kay Vincent - LaserSister 20240403

As mentioned earlier , I’ve declared that one of my creative goals for 2024 is to create at least 52 AI assisted/inspired artworks this year, where I’ll use AI-generated images as a prompt for actual physical creative pieces. This latest project is a real departure from my usual work. Instead of featuring lasercutting or polymer clay, this one involves creating a rose-and-skull fabric design. I didn’t think it would be horribly difficult. I was wrong.

For this project I had a very clear image in my mind of the end result that I wanted. I was aiming for a design made up of large white roses (specifically Yorkshire roses, if possible) and small white skulls. However, my first problem (learned from experience) was that most AIs didn’t seem to know what a Yorkshire rose was. (Have a look on the Wikipedia page for more info, but basically it’s a symbol with particular historical and geographical links.) Yorkshire is a region in the North of England, and its heraldic symbol is a white rose like this:

By Flag Institute - https://www.flaginstitute.org/wp/flags/yorkshire/, CC BY-SA 4.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=62409140

I’m from Yorkshire so that’s why I wanted a white rose. As for the skull; that was firstly because I often like to have memento mori reminders of mortality around me, to remind me to enjoy (or at least appreciate) life while I can. Secondly it was because my sister used to have a cool scarf that looked like a flowery design from a distance, but up close it was full of skulls. So I wanted to play with that surprise-skull idea.

This was my first attempt at a design, using Adobe Firefly and the prompt of: “Seamless repeating pattern of large Tudor Roses and small human skulls”:

Firefly - Tudor Roses and skulls 202402151441

(I used the phrase “Tudor rose” rather than “Yorkshire Rose” because I thought the AI might be more familiar with the term, but obviously it wasn’t.) Some parts of this design were amazing, such as the repeating pattern, and the overall look of the skulls and the roses). Some parts were disappointing, though – e.g. instead of big roses and little skulls it had big skulls and litte roses. Not bad for a first effort, though.

But when I tried to refine the image to get it closer to what I wanted, Firefly stopped cooperating. I went through about 40 iterations of attempting to get it to produce an image with large roses and small skulls, where it was continually ignoring the part about skulls. Example below shows that I even gave it a reference image in addition to the prompt, “Seamless repeating pattern of large Yorkshire Roses and human skulls, on a sage-coloured background. (A Yorkshire Rose is a traditional emblem of the county of Yorkshire in the UK. It typically features five petals, with small, green leaves visible between each petal. It is similar to a Tudor Rose, but all of its petals are white)”:

firefly roses and skulls attempt

This is yet another example of when AIs go rogue. Firefly was simply refusing to create any skulls. So I had to give up with Firefly and try Kittl instead.

Kittl created some pretty good roses and skulls, but couldn’t create seamless repeating patterns:

kittl attempt at rose and skull pattern 20240215

…so I tried ChatGPT/DALL-E. That image generator produced tons of fantastic roses and skulls, but again was completely incapable of producing a seamless repeating design:

DALL-E 20240212 roses and skulls on black - Kay Vincent - LaserSister

By this time I’d spent several hours trying to force the various AIs to come up with a seamless repeating design of large white roses and small white skulls. The different image generators could EITHER create a repeating pattern OR create a pattern of roses and skulls. So in the end I had to give up bashing my head against a brick wall and come to a compromise. I had to take my favourite image and ‘manually’ manipulate the size of the roses and skulls so that they were the right proportions. Then I had to manually adjust the elements of the image so that they formed a seamless repeating pattern.

One day I may create another post showing in detail how to create a repeating pattern, but briefly I used Linearity Curve to create ‘masks’ of the individual elements of the design, so that I could later change their sizes and positions:

creating a seamless repeating pattern from DALL-E design using Linearity Curve
Original image (bottom left), then I isolated each element (top left) and removed their backgrounds (top right).

I felt like this manual alteration was cheating, because the AIs hadn’t been able to do exactly what I wanted. But as with so many of my other projects there came a time when I had to recognise how much time I’d already spent trying to get the perfect image, and to just relax and tell myself that the technology wasn’t quite ready for me yet. It was so frustrating, though! I knew that AIs could create seamless repeating patterns, because Firefly had been creating loads of them for me. And I knew that AIs could create roses and skulls together. So why couldn’t they just do what I asked?!

Anyway, I had to just suck it up and do some final bits of image manipulation myself, to get the image I’d been hoping for. This was what I ended up with:

DALL-E and Kay Vincent 20240212 roses and skulls on blue & green

Creating the physical object

Having finally created my repeating pattern of large roses and small skulls, I could move onto the next stage of the project. That was to create a physical object from the design.

I thought I might try to use Redbubble to create an actual physical object. Here is their mockup of what my design would look like if it was turned into a backpack:

Redbubble roses and skulls on a backpack - Kay Vincent - LaserSister

I’m still tempted to do that, actually. Maybe when my current backpack dies.

…but eventually I chose to have it printed on plain cotton fabric. I used Maake.com. I was so excited when the fabric arrived:

Roses and skulls fabric from Maake - Kay Vincent - LaserSister 20240403

Here’s more of a close-up view:

Roses and skulls fabric from Maake v2 - Kay Vincent - LaserSister 20240403

The roses and skulls are exactly how I wanted them: you just notice the roses from a distance, but then from closer up you can see the little skulls. The only disappointing thing was that there wasn’t enough difference between the shades of blue. Never mind though – I’m sure I can find a use for this fabric. Maybe that will be another whole project. In the meantime – mission accomplished! An AI assisted physical object of rose-and-skull fabric.

How well did the AI(s) follow my prompts?

As explained above, the three AIs all managed some great individual designs but either couldn’t (in the case of creating repeating patterns) or wouldn’t (in the case of creating skulls) do what I asked. At the time of writing this post (April 2024) Kittl and DALL-E still can’t do repeating patterns. And Firefly still won’t mix roses with skulls. I’d score them all about 6/10 in their attempts to follow the prompts. Some of the images produced along the way were great, but just didn’t fully fit the brief.

Lessons learned

  1. As usual, the technology isn’t quite ready for me yet. I thought my requirements were fairly straightforward, and yet none of the AIs were capable of doing what I wanted.
  2. How to create repeating patterns. That was a real bonus, actually. I think it’s a skill I can use in future projects.
  3. There are some great companies around (e.g. Redbubble, Maake) who can turn digital images into physical objects.

Things I still need to learn or improve

  1. It would be good if I could come up with a way to tell when I’m wasting time versus spending time on the projects. Failing that, maybe I should just set a timer for working on the AI design phase of the project. ChatGPT/DALL-E helps with that, because after a while it stops and says I need to come back in X hours. Kittl and Firefly have ‘token’ systems instead, where you can only ask for a certain number of images.
  2. Apart from that, in general I just need to keep my eyes and ears open for updates in the AI text-to-image generators, to know when I’ll finally be able to ask the AI to create a seamless repeating pattern of large white roses and small human skulls on a green or blue background.

Homework:

  1. Now I need to make something out of the fabric!

Summary:

This unexpectedly turned out to be a monster of a project. I had to fight the AIs all the way to try to get them to create repeating rose-and-skull patterns. In the end I just had to compromise by doing some of the design work myself. However I was really pleased with the end result of the rose and skull fabric.


Thanks for reading this post. If you’ve got any suggestions of what I can actually make with the fabric – or if you’ve been experimenting yourself with AI-generated images – I’d love to hear about them. You can either comment below or send me a message via the Contact form.

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AI Assisted Artwork #5: Wedding Woodcut

Charlie & Bex wedding woodcut - Kay Vincent - LaserSister

As mentioned earlier, one of my creative goals for 2024 is to create at least 52 AI assisted/inspired artworks this year, (using AI-generated images as a prompt for actual physical creative pieces). My latest piece was for a commissioned artwork, of a wedding woodcut. The customer had seen my previous wedding heart papercut, but wanted a wooden heart instead of paper.

I suppose I could have just used the same design as the papercut…

Natalie _ Oliver papercut - Kay Vincent - LaserSister
Personalised papercutting

…but this seemed like a great opportunity to ask an AI to help me with a new design. This time I used ChatGPT / DALL-E. Here is the first prompt (I’m still in the habit of using “please” and “thank you” with the AI):

“please could you create a design for a heart-shaped piece of wooden wall art for a wedding? The wooden object should feature the names “Charlie & Bex.”

and this was the result:

DALL-E wooden wedding heart - Kay Vincent - LaserSister

Wow.

It was a lovely design, but it didn’t really scream ‘wedding’ at me, so I followed up with “Please could you try the same design, but with the design cut out using a fretsaw or scrollsaw (instead of carved into the wood)?” This is what came out next:

DALL-E wedding heart for Charlie & Bex - Kay Vincent - LaserSister

Wow again. For a start I was impressed that Dall-E actually knew what I meant by fretsaw or scrollsaw! But it still needed to be a bit more wedding-y (and what the heck was that “CERDDING” about?!)

This is why I really like the collaborative aspect of ChatGPT’s Dall-E. Having the interaction as a conversation allows the user to tweak the design in an iterative way, just changing one or two parts of the prompt at a time, instead of having to type out a giant long prompt with all of the required elements of the design. I felt that the second design still looked a bit too flowery, so I asked it to replace the large flowers with doves. Here is the result:

DALL-E revised wooden wedding heart - Kay Vincent - LaserSister

Fibber!

Again, that was a really nice design, but one of the things I’d liked about the previous versions was that the design had included a small blank heart near the bottom, which I thought would be a great place to write the date of the actual wedding. So I asked Dall-E to insert a small blank heart near the bottom.

Dall-E replied “Here’s the updated design with a small blank heart near the bottom, providing space for you to add text later.

DALL-E wooden wedding heart design - Kay Vincent - LaserSister

– but that was a big fat fib! Unfortunately, although ChatGPT / Dall-E is fantastic in a lot of ways, it often falsely claims that it has done what I asked. I actually really liked that design, but because it wasn’t 100% perfect I persevered and asked it to include roses or passion flowers. Again, it came up with a lovely design…

Wedding woodcut design by DALL-E and Kay Vincent - LaserSister

…but again it wasn’t quite right. I loved the birds and the overall look and the little banner with the names in, but there were a couple of problems:

  • There still wasn’t a blank heart for me to add a date later
  • Some of the lines were getting a bit too fine to cut out
  • I didn’t really like the big flower in the middle

Getting somewhere…

So I tried again, with this prompt: “Create a design for a heart-shaped piece of wooden wall art for a wedding, which looks like it has been cut out by a fretsaw or scrollsaw. The wooden object should feature: the names “Charlie & Bex”, two doves, a simplified passion flower, and a small heart-shaped area left blank for text.

Charlie & Bex wooden woodcut design by DALL-E and Kay Vincent - LaserSister

This time the GPT had done exactly what I asked…except that I’d changed my mind about putting in a lotus flower.

“Nice! Can you try another design like the one on the left, but with a rose or calla lily instead of the lotus flower?”

Charlie & Bex wedding woodcut with giant passion flower

Frustration

This is where I started to get frustrated. I’d thought that the next image was going to be perfect, but it was getting worse. It had inserted a passion flower instead of a rose, had mis-spelled Charlie, and changed the doves into seagulls. Sigh. At the moment (April 2024) there always seems to be a point where the GPT turns into a complete arse, and deliberately does stuff to annoy me. We went through about twenty more iterations after that, where it was creating very nice designs, but they weren’t actually what I’d asked for. I swear it was deliberately ignoring my instructions.

After several days of fighting with DALL-E on and off, it finally created a design that I thought could work as a lasercut piece:

DALL-E better woodcut - Kay Vincent - LaserSister

This fit the brief in most ways:

  • Heart shape wedding woodcut
  • Rose
  • Two doves
  • Correct names in a banner
  • Infinity symbol
  • Small blank heart (although it was too small to incorporate any text)
  • Looked like it had been (or could be) cut with a fretsaw or scrollsaw

Final Design

I made a few tweaks to the final design, by:

  1. Making sure all of the elements connected to at least one other element, so no pieces dropped out.
  2. Simplifying and/or thickening the swirling lines of the designs, to make the final piece less fragile.
  3. Swapping the doves for two others from an earlier version.
  4. Converting the squiggle above the heart-and-infinity-sign into a “CB” monogram.
  5. Changing the typeface of the names.
  6. Enlarging the blank heart so I could add text to it.
  7. Changing the decorative edge to a repeating “C&B” design.
  8. Adding a hanging loop.
  9. Altering the squiggles above the rose so that they formed another heart.
Charlie & Bex wedding woodcut - Kay Vincent - LaserSister

Here they are next to each other:

I do love the original, but it just wasn’t practical to cut out exactly as it was (e.g. with some lines being too thin, and some elements not connected to the rest of the design). I might try etching it rather than cutting it, just so I have a version that’s more faithful to the original, but on the whole I’m really pleased with the way the wedding woodcut turned out.

The only real improvement that I feel I made is that I joined the top parts of the heart (above the infinity symbol). Most of the other changes were just compromises, to join up the disconnected or thin sections.

Lessons learned

  1. ChatGPT / DALL-E is awesome. I can’t believe how aesthetically pleasing most of those designs are.
  2. From a technical point of view, I’ve learned how to create ‘masked’ sections of images via the Linearity Curve app (i.e. sections of the design I can isolate, then copy and paste and/or export into other applications).

Things I still need to learn or improve

  1. Why does it do that thing where it starts ignoring parts of my prompts? I need to try to find out if there’s a way to stop that happening.

Homework:

  1. Try to create a specialist ‘Wedding Woodcut’ GPT, so I can design similar wedding hearts in the future.

Summary:

I felt like this was a really successful project. DALL-E helped me to create a design which combined the look of a traditional woodcut with the modern technology of lasercutting and AI image generation.


Thanks for reading this ‘Wedding Woodcut’ post. If you’ve got any suggestions of prompts or products – or if you’ve been experimenting yourself with AI-generated images – I’d love to hear about them. You can either comment below or send me a message via the Contact form.

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AI-Assisted Artwork #4: Author Merchandise for Recipe Book Authors: Laser-Etched Spoon

laser etched recipe book author merchandise - wooden spoon - LaserSister Kay Vincent

I have just been to the 20Books Sevilla conference, and it was just as inspiring as I’d expected. Before I set off, I asked ChatGPT to come up with some ideas for “author merchandise” (because I’m still on my challenge of creating 52 AI-assisted artworks during 2024.) One of the ideas it suggested was “Author merchandise for recipe book authors”, which should include “A recipe book title etched onto a wooden spoon”. So here is my interpretation below. To be honest I’m nor sure this even counts as an artwork, but I thought that authors of recipe books could put their book title on one side…

QR code on back of ChatGPT's suggestion for a spoon for recipe book author

…and then they could put a QR code for their website on the other side of the spoon:

QR code on back of ChatGPT's suggestion for QR code on a spoon for recipe book author

As it happens, I didn’t actually meet any authors of recipe books at the 20Books conference so I couldn’t show them my spoon-based wares, but that doesn’t really matter because I’m just doing what the AI tells me to do.

I met lots of lovely writers (even though none of them were authors of recipe books), and I also made a drunken promise commitment to another author (which I will explain more about at a later date…)

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AI Assisted Artwork #2: How To Design A Laser-Etched Wooden Book Cover

Detail of laser etched wooden book cover with demon 20240118 - LaserSister Kay Vincent

As mentioned in an earlier blog post , I’ve declared that one of my creative goals for 2024 is to create at least 52 AI assisted/inspired artworks this year, using AI-generated images as a prompt for actual physical creative pieces. I was pleased with the first project, the heart-shaped wooden fridge magnet, but it was a relatively simple design and I also couldn’t think of a specific use for it in its original form. But I think this second artwork already shows a real evolution. For a start, the image itself is a much more complex and ambitious piece to laser etch. Secondly, I can think of several applications for the final object – especially for authors or other creatives. So welcome to the second experiment in my “An AI Made Me Do It” project: AI Assisted Artwork #2: Laser-Etched Wooden Book Cover.

[As usual, the links in this post aren’t affiliate links or sponsored products. They’re just for info.]

Where the idea came from:

I’ll be going to the “20Books Sevilla” authors’ conference in March 2024, and although I’m mainly attending with my author’s hat on, I’m also hoping to ask other authors what they think about the possibility of creating some book-related laser artworks.

With that trip in mind I was using one of the ChatGPT AI tools last week, to help me brainstorm a list of ideas for physical items that authors could offer to their readers and fans. That list ended up as a separate blog post, but as a side-product the AI image generator created a mockup illustration of book-related merchandise which might be useful to authors:

DALL-E 20240117 2230 AI generated display of various laser-cut products designed for authors

This is how ChatGPT described the image that DALL-E had created:

“a variety of laser-cut products designed for authors. This includes a decorative acrylic book cover, intricate paper invitations for a book launch, and character figurines, all set against the backdrop of a cozy writer’s studio.”

I’m not sure what I think about the orange figurine with squid legs, but the central etched wooden book cover immediately jumped out at me. It reminded me of the Aztec calendars that laser machine vendors send out as samples if you’re thinking about buying a laser cutter.

Because I’ve seen those calendars being etched by lasers like mine, I was inspired to see if I could get an AI to create an image for me that I could use as a physical book cover. I gave DALL-E a prompt of:

“a literal design for a laser-etched wooden book cover, featuring a complex steampunk lock, surrounded by demons and hieroglyphs”

This is what came out:

DALL-E design for a laser-etched wooden book cover featuring a complex steampunk lock, surrounded by demons and hieroglyphs - LaserSister Kay Vincent
COOL! (and the image generator also spontaneously produced a creepy pen/syringe as a bonus)

How well did the image fit the prompt?

I must say that for me this fit the prompt perfectly:

  • It’s certainly got demons
  • There’s a great big steampunk lock mechanism in the middle of it
  • It features some hieroglyphic-looking symbols
  • It looks like a piece of etched wood.

I was so excited that I had to immediately go and try to etch it. This was my first effort (on a piece of beech-veneered MDF sheet):

First attempt at a laser etched wooden book cover featuring steampunk lock and demons and hieroglyphs 20240118 - LaserSister Kay Vincent
Woo – not bad for a first effort, although I do need to play with the settings. Some parts (especially the main demon’s mouth) need to be etched more deeply.
Detail of laser etched wooden book cover with demon 20240118 - LaserSister Kay Vincent
(Detail of the laser-etched wooden book cover)

Here is a (speeded up) video of me etching and cutting the piece:

…and here are the original image and the physical object next to each other for comparison:

As I mentioned, I want to etch some parts of the image more deeply, but on the whole I’m very pleased with this first attempt at a laser-etched wooden book cover. I even managed to get the metallic grey background to look a bit like the one in DALL-E’s image (by resting the book cover on my laptop).

Summary

AI engine used:

The text-to-image generator “DALL-E”, which is part of the paid version of ChatGPT.

Lessons learned

  1. DALL-E did a great job of understanding what I wanted. At the moment I definitely feel like it is worth paying for this version of ChatGPT.
  2. This style of monochrome image converts very easily into a laser-etchable format.
  3. The settings that I used for the laser etching weren’t quite right on this first attempt, because the demon’s mouth in particular was disappointingly shallow.

Things I still need to learn or improve

  1. I need to find a way to make the etching deeper in some places.

Homework:

  1. Find out how to etch the demon’s mouth more deeply. (Convert to greyscale and tinker with the contrast or brightness? Not sure yet, but I’m going to have a play with it to find out.)
  2. Now I have to find a way to turn this into an actual book cover!

Additional AI thoughts:

Last week someone in my local writing group mentioned an article in the Guardian newspaper, which featured an interview with the artist Ai Weiwei about AI-generated images. He apparently said, “Art that can be copied is meaningless”, and that “even Pablo Picasso and Henri Matisse would have had to rethink their approach if AI had existed in their era”. At first glance this seemed like an argument that “AI must be bad because it can imitate famous artists’ styles” [and therefore they would just give up making art]. However I’m not convinced that Ai Weiwei is against using AI – mainly because of his forthcoming playfully-titled project “Ai vs AI”.

So on second glance, what is he saying about Picasso and Matisse? It looks like he’s implying that those other artists’ work is meaningless because an AI could imitate them, whereas his work is meaningful because he doesn’t have a style that an AI could reproduce?!

One of the great things about AI reaching the mainstream news is that it has stirred up so many conversations about the nature and meaning and value (or not) of art. I’m really enjoying all of the questions emerging from this topic. I myself am currently pondering what artists from previous eras would have thought about the work of a man whose examples include 200,000 broken spouts from teapots or jugs 😉


Thanks for reading this post. If you’ve got any suggestions of prompts or products – or if you’ve been experimenting yourself with AI-generated images (or laser-cut art) – I’d love to hear about them. You can either comment below or send me a message via the Contact form.