Custom manufacturing, made simple
You need something made. That's what we do.
Maybe it's a sign. A part. A prototype. A custom piece for an event. You don't have a workshop, you don't own a machine, and you're not sure who to even call. That is exactly who this page is for. Tell us about your project — we'll walk you through exactly what we need and make the real thing.
Does this sound like you?
If any of these fit, you're in the right place.
You have an idea
There's a thing in your head, or on a napkin. You don't know the first step. Most of our customers started right here — a rough idea is enough to start the conversation.
You need a few, not thousands
Factories want huge minimum orders. You need 5, or 50 — not 5,000. We take small jobs. The minimum is a $65 job, not a minimum quantity.
You don't want to buy equipment
Buying a machine, learning the software, finding the space — that is months of work and thousands of dollars. You can skip all of it and just send us the job.
So what is laser cutting?
Here is the short version. A laser cutter is a machine that cuts, engraves, and marks flat material using a fast, precise beam of light. A computer guides the beam, so it makes the exact same part every single time — no wobble, no dull blade, no human slip.
It works on sheet materials: wood, acrylic (the clear plastic also called plexiglass), plywood, leather, paper, fabric, foam, cork, and more. It cuts shapes, etches logos and text, marks surfaces, and scores clean fold lines.
Here is the part that matters for you: if the thing you need is flat, or built from flat pieces joined together — a sign, a panel, a box, a bracket, a display, a prototype, an ornament — laser cutting is usually the fastest and cheapest way to make it. We run four industrial lasers with beds up to 46 by 58 inches, so we handle small parts and large ones.
And if your thing is thick, round, or fully three-dimensional, a laser is not the right tool. We will tell you that honestly and point you toward a CNC shop or 3D printing. We would rather be straight with you than waste your money.
Things people bring us.
A few real examples, so you can picture where your project fits.
Signs and displays
Storefront signs, booth displays, office logos, directional signs, menu boards.
Prototypes and parts
The first version of a product, brackets, mounts, and one-off custom parts.
Boxes and enclosures
Electronics enclosures, packaging, gift boxes, and control panels.
Replacement parts
Have a part that broke or wore out? Send the original. We measure it and make new ones.
Event pieces
Wedding favors, party decor, photo backdrops, awards, and branded giveaways.
Shop tools
Jigs, fixtures, templates, and reusable stencils that make your own work faster.
What you'll need to send.
Here is the honest version. For most projects we need a real design file — a vector file the laser can read. A sketch or photo is a fine way to start the conversation, but a proper file is what actually gets cut.
Most jobs: a vector file
AI, DXF, or PDF. This is what the laser reads. About 9 out of 10 projects need one. If you already have it, you're ready for a quote.
Prototypes: more flexible
Building a first version? Prototypes are the exception — we can often work from a rough sketch or a sample part while you nail down the design.
File needs work? We fix it
Our file-fixing team cleans up messy files and gets them cut-ready. $40/hr, billed only after you approve. Simple files usually run $40 to $80.
Not sure if your file will work? Send it anyway — a real person checks every file before you are charged, and we'll tell you up front if it needs cleanup and what that costs. One thing we do not do: design your product from scratch. We need a file, a clear sketch, or a sample to work from — but from there, we handle the rest.
How it works.
Four steps from "I need a thing" to a finished part in your hands.
Step 1
Send what you have
Send your design file on the quote page — or a sketch, photo, or sample to start the conversation. Email works too. A real person tells you exactly what we need to make it.
Step 2
Get a quote
You get an instant ballpark price. Then a real person reviews the job and sets your final price before you are charged a cent.
Step 3
Approve the price
You see the final price with no surprise fees. The smallest job we take is $65. Most first projects land between $65 and $300.
Step 4
We make it
Standard turnaround is 3 to 5 business days, with next-day rush available. Pick it up in downtown LA, or we ship anywhere in the US.
Tell us what you're trying to make.
You don't need to know the lingo. Send your file, a sketch, or a photo to start — and we'll tell you exactly what it takes to make it.