WoodSnap
Two pages laser-engraved into real wood, plus a full-colour printed photo card.
Pick the occasion, we'll help you nail it.
Same gift, different stories. Here's what customers actually order for each kind of occasion.
Wedding keepsake
A wreath and your names engraved on page one, the date engraved on page two, and the wedding photo printed in full colour on page three. The engraved craft and the real photo in one piece.
Anniversary
An old photo engraved as line art on page one, the date engraved on page two, and a full-colour printed photo of now on page three — the years, then and today.
Newborn announcement
Baby’s name engraved across page one, the birth date and weight engraved on page two, the first photo printed in full colour on the third. A keepsake, not a card.
In memory of
Their full name and dates engraved on page one, a line that meant something engraved on page two, and a full-colour printed photo of them on the third.
Family portrait
Each name engraved on the first two pages, then the whole family printed in full colour on the third — engraving and a real photo, side by side.
Milestone birthday
21, 50, 70 — the age engraved big on page one, a quote engraved on page two, and their photo printed in full colour on the third. Lands harder than a card.
From your photo to a finished piece.
Every step handled in Singapore. Upload, preview, approve, ship. No surprises.
Set up the three pages
Engraved pages convert to line art; the photo stays in colour
We engrave pages 1–2; page 3 is a printed insert card
Collect or get it couriered
Engraved and printed,
on real wood.
A wood photo print done properly — two pages laser-engraved into real wood for the names and the art, and a third where your photo is printed in full colour. The order takes five minutes; this read takes two.
Two pages engraved into the grain, the third printed in colour
Pages one and two are laser-engraved — the names, a wreath, or a photo turned to line art, burned straight into the wood. No ink, nothing on top to peel; you can feel the marks with a fingernail.
Page three is different on purpose: your photo is printed in full colour on a card that slots into the booklet, so the engraved wood frames a real, recognisable photo.
Because the laser engraves by burning, photos on the engraved pages convert to line art first — but the printed page keeps every colour of the original.
Three pages, and each one does something different
It folds and stands like a little book. Page one might carry a wreath with your names engraved; page two a date or a line in your own words, engraved.
Page three is the printed photo — a full-colour shot of the day, the people, the place — so you’re not repeating one idea three times.
Wreath, branch and anniversary layouts come built in for the engraved pages, with eight engraving fonts to set the names.
What to send for the engraved pages, and the printed one
For the engraved pages, faces with clear contrast convert to line art best — a portrait reads cleaner than a busy group shot in harsh light.
For the printed page, any sharp colour photo works; it prints as-is, so send the version you actually want to see.
Ready in 1 working day, then self-collect at Paya Lebar Square — delivery options show at checkout.
Good questions.
Is the photo printed or engraved?
Why is page three printed instead of engraved?
What goes on the three pages?
Do the engraved pages have to use a layout?
What fonts can I use for the names?
Can I put a photo on the engraved pages too?
How long does it take, and where do I collect?
Can I order just one?
More ways to make it theirs.
Wood photo print, the real-wood way — in Singapore, a three-page wood booklet where the first two pages are laser-engraved (names, a date, a wreath, or a photo turned to line art and burned into the grain) and the third is your photo printed in full colour on a card that slots into the booklet. A wooden photo keepsake for weddings, anniversaries, newborns, milestone birthdays, family portraits and remembrance, with eight engraving fonts to set the names. Ready in 1 working day, then self-collect at Paya Lebar Square.
