The
Orange County Southern California area which
includes the following:
Anaheim 92801, 92802, 92803, 92804, 92805,
92806, 92807, 92808, 92809, 92812, 92814,
92815, 92816, 92817, 92825, 92850, 92899,
Brea 92821, 92822, 92823, Buena Park 90620,
90621, 90622, 90623, 90624, Costa Mesa 92626,
92627, 92628, Cypress 90630, Fountain Valley
92708, 92728, Fullerton 92831, 92832, 92833,
92834, 92835, 92836, 92837, 92838, Garden
Grove 92840, 92841, 92842, 92843, 92844,
92845, 92846, Huntington Beach 92605, 92615,
92646, 92647, 92648, 92649, La Habra 90631,
90632, 90633, La Palma 90623, Los Alamitos
90720, 90721, Orange 92856, 92857, 92859,
92861, 92862, 92863, 92864, 92865, 92866,
92867, 92868, 92869, Placentia 92870, 92871,
Santa Ana 92701, 92702, 92703, 92704, 92705,
92706, 92707, 92708, 92711, 92712, 92725,
92728, 92735, 92799, Seal Beach 90740, Stanton
90680, Tusin 92780, 92781, 92782, Villa
Park 92861, 92867, Westminister 92683, 92684,
92685, Yorba Linda 92885, 92886, 92887,
Aliso Viejo 92653, 92656, 92698, Dana Point
92624, 92629, Irvine 92602, 92603, 92604,
92606, 92612, 92614, 92616, 92618, 92619,
92620, 92623, 92650, 92697, 92709, 92710,
Laguna Beach 92607, 92637, 92651, 92652,
92653, 92654, 92656, 92677, 92698, Laguna
Hills 92637, 92653, 92654, 92656, Laguna
Niguel 92607, 92677, Laguna Woods 92653,
92654, Lake Forest 92609, 92630, Mission
Viejo 92675, 92690, 92691, 92692, 92694,
Newport Beach 92657, 92658, 92659, 92660,
92661, 92662, 92663, Rancho Santa Margarita
92688, San Clemente 92672, 92673, 92674,
San Juan Capistrano 92675, 92690, 92691,
92692, 92693, 92694 Ladera Ranch 92694,
Coto De Caza 92679 Anaheim Hills 92807,
92808, 92809, 92817 Dove Canyon 92679 Oceanside,
CA:92049, 92051, 92052, 92054, 92055, 92056,
92057, 92058, San Diego, 92101, 92102, 92103,
92104, 92105, 92106, 92107, 92108, 92109,
92110, 92111, 92112, 92113, 92114, 92115,
92116, 92117, 92118, 92119, 92120, 92121,
92122, 92123, 92124, 92126, 92127, 92128,
92129, 92130, 92131, 92132, 92133, 92134,
92135, 92136, 92137, 92138, 92139, 92140,
92142, 92143, 92145, 92147, 92149, 92150,
92152, 92153, 92154, 92155, 92158, 92159,
92160, 92161, 92162, 92163, 92164, 92165,
92166, 92167, 92168, 92169, 92170, 92171,
92172, 92173, 92174, 92175, 92176, 92177,
92178, 92179, 92182, 92184, 92186, 92187,
92190, 92191, 92192, 92193, 92194, 92195,
92196, 92197, 92198, 92199
Epilog Laser, laser engraving
equipment, laser cutting, laser marking
etching, laser engraver, cutting, laser,
cutter, laser marker, co2 laser, Epilogue
laser, wood engraver, wood engraving, plastic
engraving, plastic cutting |
About Laser Engraving
Laser
engraving is the practice of using lasers
to engrave or mark an object (it is also
sometimes incorrectly described as etching,
which involves the use of acid or a similar
chemical). The technique can be very technical
and complex, and often a computer system
is used to drive the movements of the
laser head. Despite this complexity, very
precise and clean engravings can be achieved
at a high rate. The technique does not
involve tool bits which contact the engraving
surface and wear out. This is considered
an advantage over alternative engraving
technologies where bit heads have to be
replaced regularly.
The impact of laser engraving has been
more pronounced for specially-designed
"laserable" materials. These include polymer
and novel metal alloys.
In situations where physical alteration
of a surface by engraving is undesirable,
an alternative such as "marking" is available.
This is a generic term that covers a broad
spectrum of surfacing techniques, including
printing and hot-branding. In many instances,
laser engraving machines are able to do
marking that would have been done by other
processes.
Laser engraving machines
A laser engraving machine can be thought
of as three main parts: a laser, a controller,
and a surface. The laser is like a pencil
- the beam emitted from it allows the
controller to trace patterns onto the
surface. The controller (usually a computer)
controls the direction, intensity, speed
of movement, and spread of the laser beam
aimed at the surface. The surface is picked
to match what the laser can act on.
There are three main genres of engraving
machines: The most common is the X-Y table
where, usually, the workpiece (surface)
is stationary and the laser moves around
in X and Y directions drawing vectors.
Sometimes the laser is stationary and
the workpiece moves. Sometimes the workpiece
moves in the Y axis and the laser in the
X axis. A second genre is for cylindrical
workpieces (or flat workpieces mounted
around a cylinder) where the laser effectively
traverses a fine helix and on/off laser
pulsing produces the desired image on
a raster basis. In the third method, both
the laser and workpiece are stationary
and galvo mirrors move the laser beam
over the workpiece surface. Laser engravers
using this technology can work in either
raster or vector mode.
The point where the laser (the terms "laser"
and "laser beam" may be used interchangeably)
touches the surface should be on the focal
plane of the laser's optical system, and
is usually synonymous with its focal point.
This point is typically small, perhaps
less than a fraction of a millimeter (depending
on the optical wavelength). Only the area
inside this focal point is significantly
affected when the laser beam passes over
the surface. The energy delivered by the
laser changes the surface of the material
under the focal point. It may heat up
the surface and subsequently vaporize
the material, or perhaps the material
may fracture (known as "glass" or "glass
up") and flake off the surface. This is
how material is removed from the surface
to create an engraving.
If the surface material is vaporized during
laser engraving, ventilation through the
use of blowers or a vacuum pump are almost
always required to remove the noxious
fumes and smoke arising from this process,
and for removal of debris on the surface
to allow the laser to continue engraving.
A laser can remove material very efficiently
because the laser beam can be designed
to deliver energy to the surface in a
manner which converts a high percentage
of the light energy into heat. The beam
is highly focused and collimated - in
most non-reflective materials like wood,
plastics and enamel surfaces, the conversion
of light energy to heat is more than {x%}
efficient {example reference needed}.
However, because of this efficiency, the
equipment used in laser engraving may
heat up rather quickly. Elaborate cooling
systems are required for the laser. Alternatively,
the laser beam may be pulsed to decrease
the amount of excessive heating.
Different patterns can be engraved by
programming the controller to traverse
a particular path for the laser beam over
time. The trace of the laser beam is carefully
regulated to achieve a consistent removal
depth of material. For example, criss-crossed
paths are avoided to ensure that each
etched surface is exposed to the laser
only once, so the same amount of material
is removed. The speed at which the beam
moves across the material is also considered
in creating engraving patterns. Changing
the intensity and spread of the beam allows
more flexibility in the design. For example,
by changing the proportion of time (known
as "duty-cycle") the laser is turned on
during each pulse, the power delivered
to the engraving surface can be controlled
appropriately for the material.
Since the position of the laser is known
exactly by the controller, it is not necessary
to add barriers to the surface to prevent
the laser from deviating from the prescribed
engraving pattern. As a result, no resistive
mask is needed in laser engraving. This
is primarily why this technique is different
from older engraving methods.
A good example of where laser engraving
technology has been adopted into the industry
norm is the production line. In this particular
setup, the laser beam is directed towards
a rotating or vibrating mirror. The mirror
moves in a manner which may trace out
numbers and letters onto the surface being
marked. This is particularly useful for
printing dates, expiry codes, and lot
numbering of products traveling along
a production line. Laser engraving has
allowed materials made of plastic and
glass to be marked "on the move". The
location where the marking takes place
is called a "marking laser station", an
entity often found in packaging and bottling
plants. Older, slower technologies such
as hot-stamping and pad printing have
largely been phased out and replaced with
laser engraving.
For more precise and visually decorative
engravings, a laser table is used. A laser
table (or "X-Y table") is a sophisticated
setup of equipment used to guide the laser
beam more precisely. The laser is usually
fixed permanently to the side of the table
and emits light towards a pair of movable
mirrors so that every point of the table
surface can be swept by the laser. At
the point of engraving, the laser beam
is focused through a lens at the engraving
surface, allowing very precise and intricate
patterns to be traced out.
A typical setup of a laser table involves
the fixed laser emitting light parallel
to one axis of the table aimed at a mirror
mounted on the end of an adjustable rail.
The beam reflects off the mirror angled
at 45 degrees so that the laser travels
a path exactly along the length of the
rail. This beam is then reflected by another
mirror mounted to a movable trolley which
directs the beam perpendicular to the
original axis. In this scheme, two degrees
of freedom (one vertical, and one horizontal)
for etching can be represented.
In other laser engraving devices such
as flat table or drum engraving, the laser
beam is controlled to direct most of its
energy a fixed penetration depth into
the material to be engraved. In this manner,
only a particular depth of material is
removed when the engraving takes place.
A simple machined stick or angle-iron
can be used as a tool to help trained
technologists adjust the engraver to achieve
the required focusing. This setup is preferred
for surfaces which do not vary in height
appreciably.
For surfaces that vary in height, more
elaborate focusing mechanisms have been
developed. Some are known as dynamic auto
focus systems. They adjust the lasering
parameters in real time to adapt to the
changes to the material as it is being
etched. Typically, the height and depth
of the surface is monitored with devices
tracking changes to ultrasound, infrared,
or visible light aimed at the engraving
surface. These devices, known as pilot
beams or pilot lasers (if a laser is used)
help guide the adjustments made to the
lens of the laser in determining the optimal
spot to focus on the surface and remove
material effectively.
"X-Y" laser engraving machines may operate
in vector and raster mode.
Vector engraving follows the line and
curve of the pattern to be engraved, much
like a pen-based plotter draws by constructing
line segments from a description of the
outlines of a pattern. Much early engraving
of signs and plaques (laser or otherwise)
used pre-stored font outlines so that
letters, numbers or even logos could be
scaled to size and reproduced with exactly
defined strokes. Unfortunately, "fill"
areas were problematic, as cross-hatching
patterns and dot-fills sometimes exhibited
moiré effects or uber-patterns caused
by the imprecise calculation of dot spacings.
Moreover, rotations of a font or dynamic
scaling often were beyond the capabilities
of the font-rendering device. The introduction
of the PostScript page-description language
now allows much greater flexibility--
now virtually anything that can be described
in vectors by PostScript-enabled software
like CorelDRAW or Adobe Illustrator can
be outlined, filled with suitable patterns,
and laser-engraved.
Raster engraving traces the laser across
the surface in a back-and-forth slowly-advancing
linear pattern that will remind one of
the printhead on an inkjet or similar
printer. The pattern is usually optimized
by the controller/computer so that areas
to either side of the pattern which aren't
to be engraved are ignored and the trace
across the material is thus shortened
for better efficiency. The amount of advance
of each line is normally less than the
actual dot-size of the laser; the engraved
lines overlap just slightly to create
a continuity of engravure. As is true
of all rasterized devices, curves and
diagonals can sometimes suffer if the
length or position of the raster lines
varies even slightly in relation to the
adjacent raster scan; therefore exact
positioning and repeatability are critically
important to the design of the machine.
The advantage of rasterizing is the near
effortless "fill" it produces. Most images
to be engraved are bold letters or have
large continuously-engraved areas, and
these are well-rasterized. Photos are
rasterized (as in printing), with dots
larger than that of the laser's spot,
and these also are best engraved as a
raster image. Almost any page-layout software
can be used to feed a raster driver for
an X-Y or drum laser engraver. While traditional
sign and plaque engraving tended to favor
the solid strokes of vectors out of necessity,
modern shops tend to run their laser engravers
mostly in raster mode, reserving vector
for a traditional outline "look" or for
speedily marking out lines or "hatches"
where a plate is to be cut.
Materials that can be engraved
Woods/Natural
materials
Directly "burning" images on wood were
some of the first uses of engraving lasers.
The laser power required here is often
less than 10 watts depending on the laser
being used as most are different. Hardwoods
like walnut, oak, mahogany and maple produce
good results. Softwoods can be judiciously
engraved but tend to vaporize at less-consistent
depths. Burning a softwood with a fan
blowing on it requires lowest power, quickest
speed of cut, and enough airflow to extinguish
what is trying meanwhile to ignite. Hard
papers and fiberboard work well; linty
papers and newsprint are like softwoods.
Fur is not engravable; finished leathers
though can be laser-engraved with a look
very similar to hot-branding. Certain
latex rubber compounds can be laser engraved;
for example these can be used to fabricate
inking-stamps. Paper masking tape is sometimes
used as a pre-engraving overcoat on finished
and resiny woods so that cleanup is a
matter of picking the tape off and out
of the unengraved areas, which is easier
than removing the sticky and smoky surround
"halos" (and requires no varnish-removing
chemicals).
Plastics
Standard cast acrylic plastic, acrylic
plastic sheet, and other cast resins generally
laser very well. A commonly engraved award
is a cast acrylic shape designed to be
lasered from the back side. Styrene (as
in compact disc cases) and many of the
thermoforming plastics will tend to melt
around the edge of the engraving spot.
The result is usually "soft" and has no
"etch" contrast. The surface may actually
deform or "ripple" at the lip areas. In
some applications this is acceptable;
for example date markings on 2-litre soda
bottles does not need to be sharp.
For signage and faceplates, etc., special
laser-engraving plastics were developed.
These incorporate silicate or other materials
which conduct excess heat away from the
material before it can deform. Outer laminates
of this material vaporize easily to expose
different colored material below.
Other plastics may be successfully engraved,
but orderly experimentation on a sample
piece is recommended. Bakelite is said
to be easily laser-engraved; some hard
engineering plastics work well. Expanded
plastics, foams and vinyls however are
generally candidates for routing rather
than laser engraving. Urethane and silicone
plastics usually don't work well-- unless
it is a formulation filled with cellulose,
stone or some other stable insulator material.
Metals
The best traditional engraving materials
started out to be the worst laser-engravable
materials. This problem has now been solved
using lasers at shorter wavelengths than
the traditional 10,640nm wavelength CO2
laser. Using Nd:YVO4 technology at 1,064nm
wavelength, or its harmonics at 532 and
355nm, metals can now easily be engraved
using commercial systems.
Coated metals
However, the same conduction that works
against the spot vaporization of metal
is an asset if your objective is to vaporize
some other coating away from the metal.
Laser engraving metal plates are manufactured
with a finely-polished metal, coated with
an enamel paint made to be "burned off".
At levels of 10-30 watts, excellent engravings
are made as the enamel is removed quite
cleanly. Much laser engraving is sold
as exposed brass or silver-coated steel
lettering on a black or dark-enamelled
background. A wide variety of finishes
is now available, including screen-printed
marble effects on the enamel.
Stone and glass
Stone and glass do not turn gaseous very
easily. As expected, this makes them generally
a better candidate for other means of
engraving, most notably sandblasting or
cutting using diamonds and water. But
when a laser hits glass or stone, something
else interesting happens: it fractures.
Pores in the surface expose natural grains
and crystalline "stubs" which, when heated
very quickly, can separate a microscopic
sized "chip" from the surface because
the hot piece is expanding relative to
its surroundings. So lasers are indeed
used to engrave on glass, and if the power,
speed and focus are just right, excellent
results can be achieved. One should avoid
large "fill" areas in glass engraving
because the results across an expanse
tend to be uneven; the glass ablation
simply cannot be depended on for visual
consistency, which may be a disadvantage
or an advantage depending on the circumstances
and the desired effect.
Use of laser engraving in industrial
applications
Cutting
It should be mentioned, though outside
the scope of this article, that lasers
of high power have the capability of not
only engraving, but cutting material.
The same basic techniques and considerations
are used in fabrication of many cut shapes,
whether in wood or in stacked fabric for
apparel manufacture, or even metals (plasma
cutting). It is just all done at power
levels which allow the laser to penetrate
quickly through the piece rather than
only at the surface level. Evacuation
of released gases is often provided by
a forced-air "snout" trained directly
on the laser cutting area. The process
is also referred as laser converting in
some industries.
Printing
Direct laser engraving of flexo photopolymer
plates or sleeves (which fit over a mandrel)
is attracting wider interest following
some recent technical developments and
mergers of vendors. Up to now the process
has been associated with wide-web flexo
printing of, for example, film or paper
packaging (flexible packaging). Here it
competes with rotary gravure, although
direct laser engraving is also being introduced.
For the less expensive flexo process,
the technology is being adapted for smaller
formats suitable for engraving flexo plates
or sleeves mounted on the actual printing
cylinders.
This includes narrow and wide (up to 36
inches wide), and mid-web flexo presses
(up to 24 inches wide), which could open
up the market for self-adhesive label
and packaging converters interested in
the digital - that is filmless - route.
With this process there is no integral
ablation mask as with direct laser imaging
(see below). Instead a high-power carbon
dioxide laser head burns away, or ablates,
unwanted material. The aim is to form
sharp, relief images with steep, smooth
edges to give a high standard of process
color reproduction. A short water wash
and dry cycle follows, which is a lot
less involved than in the post-processing
stages for direct laser imaging or conventional
flexo platemaking using photopolymer plates.
Dupont has introduced a new type of finishing
for the flexo graphic industry that removes
the need for polymer plates to be washed
and dried, meaning there is no swell in
the plate material. It is called a Fast
machine, and can be used for material
up to 42" x 60".
Direct laser imaging
Closely related is the direct imaging
of a digital flexo plates or sleeves 'in-the-round'
on a fast-rotating drum, or cylinder.
This is carried out on a platesetter integrated
within a digital prepress workflow which
also supports digital proofing. Again,
this is a filmless process, which removes
one of the variables in obtaining the
fine and sharp dots for screened affects,
including process color printing.
With this process the electronically-generated
image is scanned at speed to a photopolymer
plate material that carries a thin black
mask layer on the surface. The infrared
laser-imaging head, which runs parallel
to the drum axis, ablates the integral
mask to reveal the uncured polymer underneath.
A main ultraviolet exposure follows to
form the image through the mask. The remaining
black layer absorbs the ultraviolet radiation,
which polymerizes the underlying photopolymer
where the black layer has been removed.
The exposed digital plate still needs
to be processed like a conventional flexo
plate. That is, using solvent-based washout
with the necessary waste recovery techniques,
although some water-washable digital plates
are in development. This technology has
been used since 1995 and is only now becoming
more widely used around the world as more
affordable equipment becomes available.
Trade sources say there are around 650
digital platesetters installed in label,
packaging and trade platemaking houses.
In flexo direct laser engraving can be
done using a CO2-laser. This makes it
possible to direct ablate the non-printing
area. This way steps like UV-exposing,
chemical washing and drying are not necessary
anymore. Before the year 2000 lasers only
produced lower quality in rubber-like
materials. In these rubber-like materials,
which had a rough structure, higher quality
was impossible. At the Drupa 2004 the
direct engraving of polymer plates was
introduced. This had also an effect on
the rubber-developers who, in order to
stay competitive, came with new high quality
rubber-like materials. Since then direct
laser engraving of flexo-printingforms
is seen by many as the modern way to make
printing-forms for it is the first real
digital way.
Sub Surface Laser Engraving (SSLE)
Sub-surface laser engraving is the process
of engraving an image below the surface
of a solid material, usually glass, with
an optical clarity to minimize distortion
of the laser.
Since its inception in the late 90's,
SSLE has become more cost effective with
a number of different sized machines ranging
from small (~$35-60KUS) to large production
sized tables (>$250KUS) - still although
these machines are becoming more available
there is estimated only a few hundred
in operation worldwide. Many machines
require very expensive cooling, maintenance
and calibration for proper use. The primary
component being the laser diodes, which
excite a pulsed solid state laser, can
easily cost 1/3rd of the machine cost
itself that have a limited number of hours.
In past 5 years the use of SSLE has become
more cost effective to produce 3D images
in souvenir 'crystal' or promotional items
with only a few designers concentrating
on designs incorporating large or monolithic
sized crystal. A number of companies offer
custom made souvenirs by taking 3D pictures
or photos and engraving them into the
crystal. Quality of the designs and images
varies greatly between vendors in the
promotional and personal services sector
(photo engravers) - the mass producing
curio vendors have the habit of reducing
resolution of the points and lowering
output to maximize their laser diodes
lifespan. When properly produced, designs
in this medium can be striking and mesmerizing.
The
Orange County Southern California area
which includes the following:
Anaheim 92801, 92802, 92803,
92804, 92805, 92806, 92807, 92808, 92809,
92812, 92814, 92815, 92816, 92817, 92825,
92850, 92899, Brea 92821, 92822, 92823,
Buena Park 90620, 90621, 90622, 90623,
90624, Costa Mesa 92626, 92627, 92628,
Cypress 90630, Fountain Valley 92708,
92728, Fullerton 92831, 92832, 92833,
92834, 92835, 92836, 92837, 92838, Garden
Grove 92840, 92841, 92842, 92843, 92844,
92845, 92846, Huntington Beach 92605,
92615, 92646, 92647, 92648, 92649, La
Habra 90631, 90632, 90633, La Palma 90623,
Los Alamitos 90720, 90721, Orange 92856,
92857, 92859, 92861, 92862, 92863, 92864,
92865, 92866, 92867, 92868, 92869, Placentia
92870, 92871, Santa Ana 92701, 92702,
92703, 92704, 92705, 92706, 92707, 92708,
92711, 92712, 92725, 92728, 92735, 92799,
Seal Beach 90740, Stanton 90680, Tusin
92780, 92781, 92782, Villa Park 92861,
92867, Westminister 92683, 92684, 92685,
Yorba Linda 92885, 92886, 92887, Aliso
Viejo 92653, 92656, 92698, Dana Point
92624, 92629, Irvine 92602, 92603, 92604,
92606, 92612, 92614, 92616, 92618, 92619,
92620, 92623, 92650, 92697, 92709, 92710,
Laguna Beach 92607, 92637, 92651, 92652,
92653, 92654, 92656, 92677, 92698, Laguna
Hills 92637, 92653, 92654, 92656, Laguna
Niguel 92607, 92677, Laguna Woods 92653,
92654, Lake Forest 92609, 92630, Mission
Viejo 92675, 92690, 92691, 92692, 92694,
Newport Beach 92657, 92658, 92659, 92660,
92661, 92662, 92663, Rancho Santa Margarita
92688, San Clemente 92672, 92673, 92674,
San Juan Capistrano 92675, 92690, 92691,
92692, 92693, 92694 Ladera Ranch 92694,
Coto De Caza 92679 Anaheim Hills 92807,
92808, 92809, 92817 Dove Canyon 92679
Oceanside, CA:92049, 92051, 92052, 92054,
92055, 92056, 92057, 92058, San Diego,
92101, 92102, 92103, 92104, 92105, 92106,
92107, 92108, 92109, 92110, 92111, 92112,
92113, 92114, 92115, 92116, 92117, 92118,
92119, 92120, 92121, 92122, 92123, 92124,
92126, 92127, 92128, 92129, 92130, 92131,
92132, 92133, 92134, 92135, 92136, 92137,
92138, 92139, 92140, 92142, 92143, 92145,
92147, 92149, 92150, 92152, 92153, 92154,
92155, 92158, 92159, 92160, 92161, 92162,
92163, 92164, 92165, 92166, 92167, 92168,
92169, 92170, 92171, 92172, 92173, 92174,
92175, 92176, 92177, 92178, 92179, 92182,
92184, 92186, 92187, 92190, 92191, 92192,
92193, 92194, 92195, 92196, 92197, 92198,
92199
About
Orange County where M.I.L.E. is located:
Orange County, The Gold
Coast of California with over 42 miles of
coastline with spectacular vistas that have
led many to proclaim it the 'California
Riviera'. Orange County is home to the world's
most popular attractions such as The Disney
Resort and California Adventure, Mission
San Juan Capistrano known as "The Jewel
of the Missions" and Knott's Berry Farm.
The Mission San Juan Capistrano is also
the location for The Great Stone Church,
mission San Juan Capistranoa cathedral ruin
that has been named one of the world's 100
most endangered Sites. The City is also
known as the home of the Swallows of Capistrano
who's incredible migration brings them back
to Capistrano every March where their return
is celebrated with their famous Swallow's
Day Parade.
Almost in the shadow of Disneyland is Edison
Field formally called "The Big A" where
the California Angels have been thrilling
baseball fans since 1966. Also nearby is
Arrowhead Pond, home of the Mighty Ducks
Hockey Team.
Just South of Anaheim is the Crystal Cathedral,
a 12 story glass and steel wonder, known
for its Easter and Christmas Pageants. In
nearby Costa Mesa just east of Newport Beach
is South Coast Plaza a sprawling center
for shopping and dining.
A favorite destination set on the pristine
South Coast is Laguna Beach a mecca for
art lovers who flock each summer to attend
Festival of the Arts, Pageant of the Masters,
Art-A-Fair and The Sawdust Festival.
To the North, Huntington Beach or 'Surf
City' as it is known hosts a number of major
surfing competitions including the US Open.
Huntington Harbor, Newport Harbor and Dana
Point Harbor light up winter nights with
festive boat parades.
Orange County is located in Southern California
bordering San Diego, Los Angeles and Riverside
Counties. Orange County's 2005 population
was estimated to be 3 million residents.
The average price of a home in Orange County
is $541,000. Orange County is the home of
a vast number of major industries and service
organizations. As an integral part of the
second largest market in America, this highly
diversified region has become a Mecca for
talented individuals in virtually every
field imaginable. Indeed the colorful pageant
of human history continues to unfold here;
for perhaps in no other place on earth is
there an environment more conducive to innovative
thinking, creativity and growth than this
exciting, sun bathed valley stretching between
the mountains and the sea in Orange County.
Orange County was Created March 11 1889,
from part of Los Angeles County, and, according
to tradition, so named because of the flourishing
orange culture. Orange, however, was and
is a commonplace name in the United States,
used originally in honor of the Prince of
Orange, son-in-law of King George II of
England.
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Incorporated:
March 11, 1889
Legislative Districts:
* Congressional: 38th-40th, 42nd &
43
* California Senate: 31st-33rd, 35th
& 37
* California Assembly: 58th, 64th,
67th, 69th, 72nd & 74
County Seat: Santa Ana
County Information:
Robert E. Thomas Hall of Administration
10 Civic Center Plaza, 3rd Floor,
Santa Ana 92701
Telephone: (714)834-2345 Fax:
(714)834-3098
County Government Website:
http://www.oc.ca.gov |
Orange County is famous for
its sandy beaches for swimming and surfing,
yacht harbors for sailing and pleasure boating,
and extensive area devoted to parks and
open space for golf, tennis, hiking, kayaking,
cycling, skateboarding, and other outdoor
recreation. It is at the center of Southern
California's Tech Coast, with Irvine being
the primary business hub.
Thirty-four incorporated cities are located
in Orange County; the newest is Aliso Viejo.
Seven of these cities are among the 200
largest cities in the United States. As
of August 2006, Orange County has 34 incorporated
cities. The oldest is Anaheim (1870) and
the newest is Aliso Viejo (2001).
- Aliso Viejo,
incorporated in 2001
- Anaheim, incorporated
in 1870
- Brea, incorporated
in 1917
- Buena Park, incorporated
in 1953
- Costa Mesa, incorporated
in 1953
- Cypress, incorporated
in 1956
- Dana Point, incorporated
in 1989
- Fountain Valley,
incorporated in 1953
- Fullerton, incorporated
in 1904
- Garden Grove,
incorporated in 1956
- Huntington Beach,
incorporated in 1909
- Irvine, incorporated
in 1971
- La Habra, incorporated
in 1925
- La Palma, incorporated
in 1955
- Laguna Beach,
incorporated in 1927
- Laguna Hills,
incorporated in 1991
- Laguna Niguel,
incorporated in 1989
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- Laguna Woods,
incorporated in 1999
- Lake Forest,
incorporated in 1991
- Los Alamitos,
incorporated in 1960
- Mission Viejo,
incorporated in 1988
- Newport Beach,
incorporated in 1906
- Orange, incorporated
in 1888
- Placentia, incorporated
in 1926
- Rancho Santa
Margarita, incorporated in 2000
- San Clemente,
incorporated in 1928
- San Juan Capistrano,
incorporated in 1961
- Santa Ana, incorporated
in 1886
- Seal Beach, incorporated
in 1915
- Stanton, incorporated
in 1956
- Tustin, incorporated
in 1927
- Villa Park, incorporated
in 1962
- Westminster,
incorporated in 1957
- Yorba Linda,
incorporated in 1967
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Noteworthy communities
Some of the communities that exist within
city limits are listed below:
* Anaheim Hills, Anaheim * Balboa Island,
Newport Beach * Corona del Mar, Newport
Beach * Crystal Cove/Pelican Hill, Newport
Beach * Capistrano Beach, Dana Point * El
Modena, Orange * French Park, Santa Ana
* Floral Park, Santa Ana * Foothill Ranch,
Lake Forest * Monarch Beach, Dana Point
* Northwood, Irvine * Woodbridge, Irvine
* Newport Coast, Newport Beach * Olive,
Orange * Portola Hills, Lake Forest * San
Joaquin Hills, Laguna Niguel * San Joaquin
Hills, Newport Beach * Santa Ana Heights,
Newport Beach * Tustin Ranch, Tustin * Talega,
San Clemente * West Garden Grove, Garden
Grove * Yorba Hills, Yorba Linda * Mesa
Verde, Costa Mesa
Unincorporated Orange County Communities:
* Anaheim Island * Big Canyon * Coto de
Caza * Dove Canyon * East Irvine * El Modena
* Emerald Bay * Ladera Ranch * Las Flores
* Midway City * Modjeska Canyon * North
Laguna Hills * Orange Hills * Orange Park
Acres * Rossmoor * San Juan Hot Springs
* Santa Ana Heights * Santiago Canyon *
Shady Canyon * Silverado Canyon * Sunset
Beach * Tonner Canyon * Trabuco Canyon *
Trabuco Highlands * Tustin Foothills * Wagon
Wheel
Neighborhoods within incorporated cities
in Orange County * Anaheim Hills * Atwood
Placentia * Balboa Island, Newport Beach
* Balboa Peninsula, Newport Beach * Brea-Olinda,
Brea * Corona del Mar, Newport Beach * Capistrano
Beach, Dana Point * East Anaheim, Anaheim
* East Lake, Yorba Linda * El Toro, Lake
Forest * Foothill Ranch, Lake Forest * Huntington
Harbour Huntington Beach * Kite Hill, Laguna
Niguel * Laguna Canyon, Laguna * Leisure
World Seal Beach * Lido Isle, Newport Beach
* Monarch Beach, Dana Point * Newport Coast,
Newport Beach, California * Northwood, Irvine
* Olive, Orange * Platinum Triangle, Anaheim
* Portola Hills, Lake Forest * San Joaquin
Hills, Newport Beach * Santiago Hills, Orange,
California * South Laguna, Laguna * Surfside
Seal Beach * Talega, San Clemente * Three
Arch Bay, Laguna * Turtle Rock, Irvine *
Tustin Ranch, Tustin * West Anaheim, Anaheim
* Woodbridge, Irvine * University Hills,
Irvine
Orange County
is home to many colleges and universities,
including:
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