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Just wondering if anyone has ever done anything tricky with a LightScribe label? I wanted to do a hologram by very lightly burning an image into the label, and then shifting over a few bits and burning a lighter version of it, etc... But, I went looking for software that could do this, and found nothing....

I wondered if it COULD be done, could it be done in the label image, or would it have to be in the software, to burn the bits in just the right order, and contrast to give you the hologram effect?

As a bonus, as anyone ever managed to burn a CD with an image on the data side? I figure this should be possible, but would most certainly require a lot of debugging, and work to get it right. That's something I'll have to try someday... :)

Double bonus if you can get an image to burn on a dual layer DVD to form a hologram. hehe..

If anyone HAS done this, please share your work. Even if it's just the ISO of your work and not the software than created it. I'd like to see it work...

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actually you could do it on the data side, it actually came out before lightscribe – Brad Gilbert Nov 17 '08 at 23:16

closed as not programming related by PhiLho Nov 27 '08 at 23:41

3 Answers

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The instructable that joeld42 refers to (Burning visible images onto CD-Rs) is a decent start towards converting images to CD data.

And its comments have some good references to making simple holograms.

Combining these might get you where you want to go.

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You ask a lot of far-out questions at once.

But here's a tutorial that answers at least one of them:

Burn a visible image on a CD

Good luck with the holograms.

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Not really but lightscribe burns from the center out just like burning a new disk. There is nothing stopping you from burning multiple images over each other.

You can use this to darken the contrast result of the lightscribe label with some of the cheaper media or to ghost a second label on top of another.

Position information is maintained so the laser always starts at the same place regardless of how you insert the disk.

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