Using the xTool to Make Anniversary Coasters
A Small Personal Project With Much Wider Value
Not every useful business project begins with a commercial order or a detailed product-development plan. Sometimes it begins with a simple personal idea.
We recently wanted to create a set of engraved coasters for an anniversary. The aim was to produce something attractive, personal and practical: a keepsake that could be used rather than simply placed in a drawer.
At first sight, making a few coasters may not seem like a major research and development project. However, it provided an excellent opportunity to test the xTool laser cutter, explore different materials, refine the artwork, experiment with engraving settings and improve the finishing process.
It also demonstrated an important principle behind much of the work at Philip M Russell Ltd:
Small projects are often the best way to learn skills that can later be applied to much larger ideas.
Beginning With the Purpose
Before opening the design software or switching on the laser cutter, it was important to think about what the finished coasters needed to achieve.
They needed to:
mark a significant anniversary;
look sufficiently professional to be given as a gift;
be durable enough for regular use;
have clear, readable engraving;
feel personal without becoming visually overcrowded;
work as a matching set.
This stage matters because it is very easy to become distracted by what the equipment can do. A laser cutter can produce intricate patterns, decorative borders, fine lettering and detailed images, but using every possible feature does not necessarily create a better product.
Good design begins with the purpose of the object.
For an anniversary keepsake, the emotional meaning is more important than technical complexity. A name, date, short message or simple symbol can often be more effective than an elaborate design filled with too many competing elements.
Choosing the Right Material
The choice of material affects almost every later decision.
Potential coaster materials include:
plywood;
solid wood;
bamboo;
slate;
cork;
acrylic;
coated metal;
purpose-made laser engraving blanks.
Each material behaves differently when engraved.
Wood can produce a warm, traditional finish, but the grain may affect the consistency of the lettering. Bamboo often engraves well, although the variation between light and dark sections can influence the final appearance. Slate can produce an attractive pale engraving against a dark surface, but it needs to be handled carefully because edges may chip. Acrylic offers very precise results, although it creates a more modern appearance.
For an anniversary gift, the material also contributes to the tone. Wood may suggest warmth and tradition, while slate can feel formal and substantial. Acrylic can suit a contemporary design, particularly when combined with clean lettering or a modern logo.
Material choice is therefore not simply a technical question. It is part of the message communicated by the finished object.
Preparing the Artwork
Once the material had been selected, the next stage was to prepare the engraving design.
The artwork needed to fit comfortably within the coaster rather than extending too close to the edges. A generous margin helps the design look balanced and also reduces the risk of small positioning errors becoming obvious.
Possible elements included:
the couple’s names or initials;
the anniversary date;
the number of years being celebrated;
a simple border;
a floral or geometric motif;
a short personal message;
a small company mark on the reverse, where appropriate.
One of the most useful lessons was that simple artwork tends to engrave more successfully than highly complicated artwork.
Fine lines can disappear into the surface texture. Very small lettering may become difficult to read. A font that looks elegant on a computer screen may not engrave clearly at coaster size.
This meant testing different fonts, line thicknesses and layouts before committing to the final design.
The design also needed to be converted into a format the xTool software could interpret reliably. Text had to be checked carefully, particularly names and dates. A spelling mistake on a screen can be corrected immediately; the same mistake engraved into a finished coaster usually means starting again.
Why Test Pieces Matter
It is tempting to place the final coaster into the machine and begin engraving immediately. However, materials vary, even when they appear to be identical.
A test piece allows the laser settings to be adjusted before valuable material is used.
The main variables include:
laser power;
movement speed;
number of passes;
line interval;
focus;
image resolution;
engraving mode.
Too little power may create a faint, disappointing result. Too much power can burn deeply into the material, create excessive smoke staining or remove some of the finer detail.
Similarly, moving the laser too quickly may produce an engraving that is barely visible, while moving too slowly can create unwanted charring.
A useful approach is to create a small test grid containing several combinations of power and speed. This provides a direct comparison on the actual material being used.
The best setting is not necessarily the deepest engraving. For a coaster, the aim is usually to produce a clear, attractive image without creating grooves that trap dirt or make the surface difficult to clean.
Testing Engraving Depth and Contrast
The engraving needed to be deep enough to remain visible after use, but not so deep that it weakened the surface or looked excessively burnt.
Contrast was equally important.
On pale wood, a darker engraved mark usually works well. On slate, the laser creates a lighter grey mark. Some materials produce strong contrast immediately, while others need cleaning, sealing or additional finishing.
This stage involved looking closely at several questions:
Can the lettering be read from a normal viewing distance?
Are the fine lines still visible?
Is the design evenly engraved?
Has smoke marked the surrounding surface?
Does the engraving feel smooth enough for practical use?
Will the design remain clear after the coaster has been wiped clean repeatedly?
These are simple questions, but they distinguish a successful prototype from a genuinely finished product.
Positioning the Coaster Accurately
Producing one good coaster is useful. Producing several matching coasters requires greater control.
Each blank must be positioned consistently so that the artwork appears in the same place on every coaster.
A simple positioning jig can make a considerable difference. The jig holds each coaster in the same location, reducing the need to measure and realign every blank individually.
This is a good example of how a personal craft project begins to overlap with small-scale manufacturing.
Once more than one identical item is required, repeatability becomes important. A jig saves time, reduces mistakes and helps ensure that the finished set looks professional.
The same principle can be applied to:
engraved signs;
equipment labels;
keyrings;
plaques;
branded gifts;
teaching resources;
control-panel markings;
identification plates.
Finishing the Coasters
Engraving is only one stage of the process.
After leaving the laser cutter, the coasters may need:
smoke residue removed;
edges sanded;
dust brushed or vacuumed away;
surfaces wiped carefully;
a protective finish applied;
cork or felt backing added;
a final inspection.
The correct finish depends on the material and how the coaster will be used.
A wooden coaster may benefit from a suitable oil, wax or clear protective coating. However, the finish must be appropriate for an item that may become warm or wet. It is also important to test whether the coating changes the contrast of the engraving.
Adding a cork or felt backing can protect furniture and make the coaster feel more substantial. It also gives the project another opportunity for precision: the backing needs to be centred, firmly attached and trimmed neatly.
These finishing details may take longer than expected, but they are often what transform a prototype into something that genuinely looks ready to present.
Presentation Matters
A keepsake is judged before it is even used.
A set of coasters placed loosely into a bag will not create the same impression as a carefully arranged set presented in a box, tied with a ribbon or accompanied by a small engraved tag.
Presentation does not need to be expensive. It simply needs to show care.
For an anniversary project, possible presentation ideas include:
a small wooden or card box;
tissue paper in an appropriate colour;
a printed anniversary message;
a laser-cut holder for the coaster set;
a matching engraved gift tag;
a personalised sleeve around the packaging.
This stage could itself become another xTool project. The machine might be used to create a simple box, cut a decorative insert or engrave the recipient’s names onto the lid.
The coaster project can therefore expand naturally into a complete personalised gift set.
What Did the Project Teach Us?
The finished coasters were important because they marked a personal occasion, but the process also developed several useful business skills.
Material Knowledge
Every test improves our understanding of how different materials respond to the laser.
Design Discipline
The project reinforced the value of clear layouts, readable fonts and restrained decoration.
Equipment Settings
Testing power, speed and engraving depth builds a reference library that can be used for future work.
Repeatability
Producing a matching set highlighted the importance of jigs, positioning and consistent workflows.
Quality Control
Small differences in alignment, contrast and finishing become very noticeable when several items are placed together.
Product Presentation
The way an object is cleaned, finished and packaged affects how professional it appears.
None of these lessons is limited to anniversary coasters.
From Keepsake to Possible Company Product
A successful personal project often raises the question: what else could be created using the same process?
The techniques developed during this project could transfer to:
company-branded coasters;
commemorative items for clubs and organisations;
trophies and award plaques;
wedding or anniversary gifts;
engraved equipment labels;
science-themed merchandise;
personalised teaching resources;
boat-name plaques and sailing memorabilia;
small production runs for local groups.
The value lies not only in copying the original design, but in creating a dependable process.
Once the material, settings, artwork preparation, jig and finishing method have been tested, future products can be made more quickly and consistently.
Personal Projects Make Excellent Research and Development
One of the advantages of a personal project is that it allows experimentation without the pressure of a commercial deadline.
There is time to compare materials, reject weak designs, try alternative settings and think carefully about the details.
Mistakes become useful evidence rather than wasted effort.
A faint engraving shows that the settings need adjusting. Smoke marks suggest that masking or extraction needs improvement. Uneven positioning indicates that a better jig is required. Small text that cannot be read clearly teaches us to simplify the design.
This is research and development on a manageable scale.
The lessons can then be carried forward into commercial, educational and creative work.
A Small Object With a Larger Story
The anniversary coasters began as a personal gift, but they became much more than that.
They tested the capabilities of the xTool, improved our understanding of laser engraving, developed a repeatable production method and provided ideas for possible future products.
Most importantly, they produced something meaningful.
Modern workshop equipment can sometimes appear highly technical, but its real value is found in what it allows us to create. In this case, the technology helped turn a date, a message and a piece of material into a lasting keepsake.
That is what makes small workshop projects so worthwhile.
They combine design, engineering, problem-solving and creativity—and occasionally, they also help celebrate something very special.
