SEATTLE – The desk space next to PCs first welcomed paper printers and later made room for 3-D printers. Now it's being shared by laser cutters, computer-controlled milling machines and more. The wave of new machines is bringing a new level of precision to people who make physical objects — from leather wallets to lamps and circuit boards — as a career or hobby.
It's part of a familiar theme in tech. Computers help transform expensive, complicated machines used by the few and make them more accessible to the many. The creative types — designers, craftspeople, tinkerers — take it from there.
"Your creativity is no longer limited by tools," said Dan Shapiro, co-founder and chief executive of Glowforge, a start-up in Seattle that is developing a laser cutter.
Glowforge operates out of a cavernous warehouse, next to a marijuana processing center, where it has created a prototype of a desktop laser cutter that it plans to sell for about $2,000, much cheaper than comparable machines. Glowforge says the device, which Shapiro calls a 3-D laser printer, will come with software that makes it much easier to operate than most laser cutters.
Laser cutters have been around for decades, used in industrial manufacturing applications to engrave or slice through almost any material you can think of, including steel, plastic and wood. The computer-controlled lasers in them make precision cuts that would be beyond all but the most skilled artisans.
Over the years, the machines have become a bit smaller and more available to ordinary people, largely through so-called makerspaces, open facilities aimed at designers, do-it-yourself enthusiasts and others. The makerspaces are sometimes housed in schools and sometimes privately owned. The machines have developed a strong following among jewelry-makers, printmakers and other artisans, many of whom have hung shingles out on craft sites like Etsy.
Such spaces report that they are often overwhelmed with demand for their laser cutters and see far less use of 3-D printers, which are slow, more limited in the materials they can work with and sometimes fiendishly hard to operate.
Nadeem Mazen, chief executive of DangerAwesome, a makerspace in Cambridge, Mass., says his facility's three laser cutters do 20 to 30 times more business than his two 3-D printers.