Leather and fabric are two of the most rewarding—and most misunderstood—materials for CO₂ lasers. New users often struggle with burnt edges, yellow smoke marks, fray, curling, uneven kerf, and inconsistent results.
Fortunately, these issues disappear once you understand their thermal behavior and airflow. This guide provides proven 2 mm leather and single-layer fabric cutting settings, lens recommendations, airflow strategies, fixing methods, and troubleshooting to help you achieve consistently clean, fray-free edges.
✅ Covers leather (2 mm) + fabric (single layer)
✅ Includes speed tables + lens + airflow + finishing tips
✅ Beginner-friendly + workshop-grade accuracy
Quick Answer
Leather and fabric both cut extremely well on a CO₂ laser—if the machine is set correctly:
- Use a 50 mm lens
- Use high speed to reduce burn
- Use medium → low air assist depending on material
- Secure the sheet so it doesn’t lift or flutter
- Use honeycomb table + proper exhaust
Recommended Settings (Leather & Fabric)
These baseline settings come from real machine(Gweike M Series 6-in-1) tests with ~90% laser power utilization. Tune ±20% based on material thickness, tanning method, weave, and airflow.
Leather Cutting Settings (2 mm)
| Power | Best Speed | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 60 W | 35–40 mm/s | Good for hobby cutting |
| 100 W | 45–50 mm/s | Cleaner at same depth |
| 150 W | 60–65 mm/s | Fastest + cleanest |
Fabric Cutting Settings (Single Layer)
| Power | Best Speed | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 60 W | ~58 mm/s | Good baseline |
| 100 W | ~98–100 mm/s | Faster & cleaner |
| 150 W | ~150–200 mm/s | For production |
Why Leather & Fabric Burn/Fray
Leather contains organic collagen + tannins; fabric fibers (cotton, polyester, felt) have different melting points. When energy density is too high (slow movement), fibers carbonize → burned edge.
For fabric, the laser cuts as it melts the edge. → That molten edge “seals” the fibers → no fray.
So the secret is:
Lens & Focus Setup
| Thickness | Lens | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| ≤2 mm | 50 mm | Sharp spot + clean kerf |
| Fabric (thin) | 50 mm (slight defocus) | Reduce overheat |
Best practice: Focus exactly on the top surface. For delicate fabrics: defocus 0.3–0.5 mm upward to soften edge heat.
Air Assist Strategy
Air affects both cut quality and material stability.
- Leather → Medium air
- Fabric → Low air (too much → flutter)
- Side-angled flow preferred over strong vertical
Work Bed Choice (Honeycomb Wins)
- Always use honeycomb bed
- Allows bottom airflow
- Reduces char reflection
- Prevents back-burn marks
Never cut leather/fabric directly on a metal plate— → heat bounce marks + trapped smoke.
Securing Leather & Fabric
Loose pieces → blow up → scorch + inaccurate kerf.
- Masking tape edges
- Weigh down corners
- Acrylic frame hold-down
- Mild adhesive spray (fabric only)
Cutting SOP (Step-by-Step)
- Install 50 mm lens
- Place sheet on honeycomb bed
- Fix edges (tape/weights)
- Set baseline speed from tables
- Use medium-low air assist
- Run small test pattern
- Adjust speed upward if edges burn
Leather Cutting Tips
- Vegetable-tanned leather cuts cleaner than chrome-tanned
- Masking film reduces smoke stain
- Wipe edges with alcohol afterward
- Higher speed → less discoloration
- Saddle soap helps finishing
Fabric Cutting Tips
- Polyester cuts best → sealed clean edge
- Cotton frays → finish with edge-sealing fluid
- Use low air to avoid flutter
- Use fabric stiffener for soft fabrics
- Keep fabric tensioned → clean cutlines
Troubleshooting
| Issue | Cause | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Burn marks | Too slow | Increase speed |
| Fray | Fabric loose | Tape / weights / frame |
| Wrinkling | Air too strong | Lower air |
| Dark sticky edge | Overheat | Faster speed |
| Backside marks | No honeycomb airflow | Use honeycomb bed |
Cleaning & Finishing
Leather
- Alcohol wipe for odor & soot
- Saddle soap or Tokonole for clean edge
- Light burnish if needed
Fabric
- Trim stray fibers
- Heat-seal tools for cotton
- Masking protects surface design
Safety Notes
- Leather fumes → must ventilate
- Never cut unknown coated fabrics
- Filter + exhaust recommended
- Do not leave unattended
FAQ
Q: Can a 60 W CO₂ laser cut leather?
Yes, 2 mm leather cuts well at 35–40 mm/s.
Q: Why does my leather edge look yellow?
Speed is too low; increase speed for cleaner edge.
Q: Does fabric always seal cleanly?
Polyester: yes. Cotton: may require post-sealing.
Q: Is masking tape helpful?
Yes — reduces smoke stain.
Conclusion
Leather and fabric are easy to cut on CO₂ lasers once you understand the basics:
- Use fast speeds
- Use 50 mm lens
- Use medium-low airflow
- Secure the sheet
- Use honeycomb bed
Start with the recommended settings, then fine-tune for your specific tanning/weave style.