Laser-Cut Postcard Stamp Collecting STEAM Course

Thunder Air - the Reliable Air System for Your Safer Workplace DISCOVER NOW
Application

WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING FOR?

Search Across Products, Blog Posts, Support Content, And Resources.

Search

Laser-Cut Postcard Stamp Collecting STEAM Course

2024-08-22

1. Course Overview

Postcard stamp collecting is a travel and cultural activity in which people press a unique seal from a post office, scenic spot, museum, or local attraction onto a postcard. Each stamp records a place, a memory, and a story.

In this advanced laser STEAM lesson, students design and make a postcard stamp collecting tool with a base, handle, and rubber stamp. The activity combines cultural observation, digital drawing, material planning, laser engraving, laser cutting, and final assembly.

Finished postcard stamp collecting project made with laser cutting and engraving
Finished postcard stamp collecting project.
Main structure of the postcard stamp collecting project including base handle and rubber stamp
The project includes a base, handle, and rubber stamp.

Teacher note: This is an advanced project. Students should be ready to follow multi-step modeling instructions, check dimensions carefully, and make small laser compensation adjustments so the parts assemble smoothly.

2. Learning Objectives

Understand project structure: Identify how the base, handle, and rubber stamp work together in the finished object.
Create digital cutting files: Use LaserMaker tools such as rectangle drawing, contour tracing, alignment, origin selection, arrays, mirroring, grouping, and rounded corners.
Plan laser processes: Match rubber, acrylic, and wood-based materials with engraving, outlining, and cutting operations.
Build and reflect: Assemble the work, test the stamp effect, and discuss how small design changes can improve use and durability.

3. Real-World Context

Stamp collecting on postcards is both a cultural experience and a form of personal collecting. During the stamping process, students can learn about local landmarks, public spaces, tourism culture, and the way small physical objects carry emotional memories across time and distance.

Teachers can connect this lesson with geography, visual design, cultural studies, local history, and product design. Students can adapt the stamp pattern for a city, school, club, museum activity, travel project, or classroom exhibition.

4. Design and Engineering Considerations

The project is divided into three main parts: the base, the handle, and the rubber stamp. Students should analyse how each part supports the finished function before drawing the final file.

Base: Supports the stamp structure and includes slots and layered parts for assembly.
Handle: Provides a comfortable structure for pressing the stamp and includes multiple interlocking laser-cut patterns.
Rubber stamp: Carries the engraved city or place illustration that will be pressed onto the postcard.

Assembly tip: The source lesson reminds students to consider laser compensation. Depending on the material and machine result, hole and slot positions may need small adjustments of about 1–2 mm to make assembly easier.

5. Materials and Tools

NumberMaterial or ToolQuantity
13 mm acrylic1
23 mm basswood panel1
32 mm rubber1
4Glue1
5Postcard1
6Springs2
7Ink pad7

6. Lesson Procedure

6.1 Rubber Stamp Artwork Production

First, prepare a city illustration or place-based image for the stamp. The source lesson uses “City Illustration Dongguan” as the example. For classroom use, teachers may ask students to use a teacher-approved image, draw their own original city illustration, or create artwork based on a local landmark.

Opening a city illustration image in LaserMaker for the rubber stamp design
Open the selected city illustration image in the software.

Select the image and use Contour Tracing to convert the illustration into a line drawing. This creates the basic line artwork for the rubber stamp.

Contour tracing result for the city illustration rubber stamp artwork
Use contour tracing to create the stamp line artwork.

Use the Eraser Tool to separate connected buildings and refine the illustration. Students should keep important architectural features while simplifying details that may be too fine for a clear stamp effect.

6.2 Base Production

Use the Rectangle Tool to draw two rectangles. Set Rectangle 1 to Width 180, Height 130, and Rectangle 2 to Width 150, Height 100. Duplicate these rectangles twice to create Rectangles 3, 4, 5, and 6. Adjust Rectangle 4 to Width 107, Height 87, and Rectangle 6 to Width 102, Height 165. Insert Rectangle 7 between Rectangles 3 and 4 with dimensions Width 36.5, Height 70.

Base rectangle layout for the postcard stamp collecting project
Create the main base rectangle layout.

Base layer note: Rectangle 1 is the bottom layer of the base, Rectangle 3 is the middle layer, and Rectangle 5 is the top layer.

Draw Notch 1 with dimensions Width 2.6, Height 10. Copy and paste this notch three times to create Notch Group 1, then place the group in the correct position inside Rectangle 1. Duplicate the notch group twice and place Notch Group 2 in Rectangle 3 and Notch Group 3 in Rectangle 5.

Notch groups positioned in the base layers
Add notch groups to the base layers.

Click Origin in the top toolbar and select Middle-Top as the origin point. Change the height of the top two notches in Notch Group 3 to 3. Then choose Middle-Bottom as the origin point and change the height of the bottom two notches in Notch Group 3 to 3.

Adjusting notch height using middle top and middle bottom origin points
Adjust notch height using the origin tool.

Draw Card Slot 1 with dimensions Width 9, Height 10, and Card Slot 2 with dimensions Width 2.6, Height 7. Use the Align tool to apply horizontal alignment and bottom alignment. Duplicate the pair of card slots three times.

Card slot layout for the laser cut base
Create and duplicate the card slot structure.

6.3 Handle Production

Select Trapezoid from the Basic Shapes section. Use the Rounding tool to round the four corners, then set the trapezoid to Width 95, Height 60.

Rounded trapezoid handle shape in LaserMaker
Create the rounded trapezoid for the handle.

Draw Rectangle 1 with dimensions Width 60, Height 36, and Rectangle 2 with dimensions Width 5.1, Height 36. Duplicate Rectangle 2 once. Center-align Rectangle 1 with the trapezoid and align it to the bottom. Place the two narrow rectangles on the left and right sides of Rectangle 1.

Click Origin and select Middle-Top as Origin. Change Rectangle 1 to Height 84. Draw Rectangle 3 with dimensions Width 16, Height 84 and center-align it with Rectangle 1. Draw Rectangle 4 with dimensions Width 2.6, Height 42, duplicate it once, and place both rectangles as shown.

Handle layout with trapezoid and vertical rectangles
Build the main handle layout with aligned rectangles.

Draw Rectangle 1 with dimensions Width 35, Height 3. Duplicate it and apply a vertical array with a count of 2 and spacing of 4.35 to create Rectangle 2. Select the trapezoid, Rectangle 1, and Rectangle 2, then duplicate them to create Trapezoid 1 and Rectangles 1.1 and 2.2.

Draw Rectangle 3 with dimensions Width 71, Height 36 and align it horizontally and vertically with Trapezoid 1. Duplicate the combined pattern twice. Draw Rectangle 4 with dimensions Width 10, Height 3, apply a horizontal array with a count of 2 and spacing of 10, group the two rectangles, center-align them with Rectangle 2.2, and delete Rectangle 2.2.

Duplicated handle patterns and arrayed rectangle details
Create duplicated handle patterns and slot details.

Draw Rectangle 1 with dimensions Width 22, Height 84, and Rectangle 2 with dimensions Width 2.6, Height 42. Center-align and top-align the two rectangles. Draw Rectangle 3 with dimensions Width 6, Height 3, duplicate it to create Rectangle 4, and place them at the lower-left and lower-right corners of Rectangle 1.

Move Rectangles 3 and 4 up by 3 mm. Apply a vertical array to Rectangles 3 and 4 with a count of 2 and spacing of -30.2 mm.

Handle part with vertical arrayed rectangle tabs
Add tab details with a vertical array.

Draw Rectangle 1 with dimensions Width 40, Height 20, and Rectangle 2 with dimensions Width 6, Height 69. Apply a horizontal array to Rectangle 2 once with spacing of 10 to create Rectangle 3. Group Rectangles 2 and 3 as Group 1 and center-align Group 1 with Rectangle 1. Draw Rectangle 4 with dimensions Width 2.6, Height 9, then horizontally and top-align it with Rectangle 1.

Handle support pattern with grouped vertical rectangles
Create the grouped handle support pattern.

Draw Rectangle 1 with dimensions Width 36, Height 10, and Rectangle 2 with dimensions Width 3, Height 35. Horizontally align them so that the right side of Rectangle 1 connects with the left side of Rectangle 2. Duplicate Rectangle 1 twice to create Rectangles 3 and 4. Move Rectangle 3 above Rectangle 1 and Rectangle 4 below Rectangle 1 so that they connect, then delete Rectangle 1.

Connected rectangle pattern for the handle design
Create a connected rectangle pattern.

Use the Create feature in the top toolbar and choose Rectangular Box. Set the box parameters to Length 100, Width 80, Height 40, and choose No Top Cover.

Rectangular box setting with no top cover in LaserMaker
Create a rectangular box without a top cover.

Draw Rectangle 1 with dimensions Width 69.8, Height 39.6 and align it horizontally and vertically with the bottom cover of the rectangular box. Draw Rectangle 2 with dimensions Width 14.9, Height 9, and Rectangle 3 with dimensions Width 4, Height 24. Duplicate Rectangle 3 as Rectangle 4, rotate Rectangle 4 by 90°, then center-align Rectangles 3 and 4 to create Group 1.

Align Rectangle 2 with Rectangle 1. Place Group 1 to the left of Rectangle 2 and connect it to Rectangle 2. Duplicate Group 1 as Group 2 and place Group 2 to the right of Rectangle 2. Delete Rectangle 2 after the side groups are positioned.

Bottom cover pattern with side groups for the handle box
Edit the bottom cover pattern and connected side groups.

Draw Rectangle 1 with dimensions Width 2.6, Height 10, Rectangle 2 with dimensions Width 13, Height 3, and Rectangle 3 with dimensions Width 10, Height 2.6. Position them as shown and group them as Group 1. Duplicate Group 1 as Group 2 and mirror Group 2 horizontally. Duplicate Groups 1 and 2 together to create Group 3, mirror Group 3 vertically, and position it as shown. Keep the needed rectangle and cross-shaped details, then remove the extra rectangles.

Mirrored rectangle and cross-shaped details for the handle box pattern
Use mirroring to create symmetrical details.

Draw Rectangle 1 with dimensions Width 25, Height 37, and Rectangle 2 with dimensions Width 68, Height 25. Draw Rectangles 3 and 4 above and below Rectangle 1, both with dimensions Width 10, Height 3. Draw Rectangles 5 and 6 above and below Rectangle 2.

Move the indicated area outside the lower cover of the box. Change the width of the two rectangles on the left side of Rectangle 1 to 3, and change the height of the two rectangles above Rectangle 2 to 3. Merge Rectangle 1 with Rectangles 3, 4, and the left-side rectangles to create Pattern 1. Merge Rectangle 2 with Rectangles 5, 6, and the upper rectangles to create Pattern 2. Duplicate Pattern 1 and Pattern 2 and position them as shown.

Merged Pattern 1 and Pattern 2 for the handle structure
Merge and duplicate Pattern 1 and Pattern 2.

Draw a rectangle with dimensions Width 36.4, Height 35.4. Use the Text Tool to add a short label. For an international classroom website sample, use English text such as Thunder Laser, a school name, or an event name. Adjust the text size to be slightly larger than the default and arrange it within or near the rectangle.

Adding label text to the handle design in LaserMaker
Add an English label or school event name to the handle design.

Locate the two rectangles in the highlighted area of the right-side pattern and duplicate them. Move the duplicated rectangles into the second rectangle in the highlighted area on the left side. After positioning the rectangles, delete the second rectangle from the left-side pattern. Then select and duplicate the outer contour of the right-side pattern and position it to match the design layout.

Duplicating rectangles and outer contour in the handle pattern
Duplicate rectangles and the outer contour to refine the layout.

Repeat the rectangle duplication and placement operation for the next highlighted area. Move the copied rectangles into the matching position on the left-side pattern, delete the unnecessary rectangle, and duplicate the outer contour as needed to keep the design aligned.

Further duplication and alignment of handle pattern details
Continue aligning duplicated handle pattern details.

Use the array function to create multiple instances of the patterns. Arrange Pattern 1 into an array of 11 identical patterns, and arrange Pattern 2 into an array of 2 patterns.

Arrayed Pattern 1 and Pattern 2 for the handle design
Use arrays to prepare repeated handle components.

After completing these steps, the design drawing for the handle is ready for laser processing.

Completed handle design drawing for the postcard stamp collecting project
Completed handle design drawing.

6.4 Laser Processing

Set up the material and layer parameters before processing. Teachers should review material suitability, supervise machine operation, and follow the school’s laser safety procedures and the machine’s operating guidance.

PartLayer or MaterialThicknessProcess
Rubber stampRubber2 mmShallow engraving
Base, red layerAcrylic3 mmOutlining
Base, black layerAcrylic3 mmCutting
Handle, yellow layerAcrylic3 mmShallow engraving
Handle, black layerAcrylic3 mmCutting

For the rubber stamp, double-click the blue layer in the Processing Panel and add a custom material named Rubber. Set the material name in English, Simplified Chinese, and Traditional Chinese as required by the software, set the thickness to 2 mm, select the rubber material image, and choose Rubber, 2 mm, Shallow Engraving.

Laser processing parameter setup for the rubber stamp
Set rubber stamp processing parameters.

For the base, select Rectangle 1 and change its layer color to red. Set the red layer to Acrylic, 3 mm, Outlining. Set the black layer to Acrylic, 3 mm, Cutting.

Laser processing parameter setup for the base
Set base processing parameters.

For the handle, select the label text and change its layer color to yellow. Set the yellow layer to Acrylic, 3 mm, Shallow Engraving. Set the black layer to Acrylic, 3 mm, Cutting.

Laser processing parameter setup for the handle
Set handle processing parameters.

7. Finished Project and Reflection

Completed laser cut postcard stamp collecting project ready for classroom display
Completed postcard stamp collecting project.

This project asks students to think carefully about structure before production. They need to break the work into functional parts, complete the design drawings, consider slot and hole compensation, and assemble the final object patiently.

After assembly, students can test the stamp on a postcard and compare the result with the original design. Encourage them to reflect on line thickness, engraving clarity, handle comfort, alignment, and whether the stamp tells a clear place-based story.

8. Equipment Note for Teachers

For schools and beginner STEAM labs, this project can be completed on a classroom laser cutter such as the Thunder Laser Bolt Series. Teachers should choose suitable materials, test parameters before class production, and supervise all cutting and engraving operations.

Contents
1. Course Overview
2. Learning Objectives
3. Real-World Context
4. Design and Engineering Considerations
5. Materials and Tools
6. Lesson Procedure
7. Finished Project and Reflection
8. Equipment Note for Teachers

Talk To Our Experts Now!

Please leave your contact information so that we can serve you better.

Name*
Email*
Country*
Your Message

NEED HELP FINDING THE RIGHT SOLUTION?

Talk to our team for machine recommendations, application advice, and support based on your needs.

We use cookies to understand how our audience uses our site.
THUNDER LASER websites use cookies to deliver and improve the website experience, See our cookie policy for further details on how we use cookies and how to change your cookie settings Cookie policy.
Accept
Reject
close