Short answer: A photo plus a few key measurements is usually enough to get a part made. The photo shows the shape and features; the measurements set the scale. A reverse-engineering shop turns this into a CAD model and drawing, confirms it with you, and machines or molds the part. Add a ruler to the photo and send caliper measurements of the critical features for the best result.

Yes — a photo can be enough

You don't need engineering software or a technical drawing to get a part manufactured. A clear photo communicates the shape, the features, and how the part is built. Combined with a handful of measurements to lock the scale, it gives a manufacturer enough to reconstruct the part accurately. This is everyday work for shops that offer reverse engineering — and it's exactly what the big instant-quote platforms can't accept, because they require a finished CAD file.

A broken metal part reproduced as an exact CNC-machined replacement — before and after From a broken part and photos to an exact replacement. See the case →

How to take photos that actually work

  1. Plain background, even light. Lay the part on a single-colour surface; avoid shadows and glare.
  2. Shoot straight-on, from several sides. Front, both ends, and side — square to the part, not at an angle (angles distort proportions).
  3. Put a ruler or caliper in the frame. This single step turns a picture into a measurable reference.
  4. Close-ups of the important bits. Threads, holes, grooves, keyways, and any feature that has to fit something.
  5. More is better. Several clear photos beat one "perfect" shot.

The measurements to send with the photo

A photo sets the shape; measurements set the size. Use calipers where you can and send:

Don't have calipers? Send what you can measure with a ruler plus the reference photo, and say so. A good shop will ask targeted follow-up questions and can estimate many dimensions from a well-scaled photo. The goal of the first message is to start the conversation, not to deliver a perfect spec.

What happens after you send the photo

  1. The shop reviews your photos and measurements and asks any clarifying questions
  2. They build a 3D CAD model and a dimensioned drawing from your input
  3. You receive the drawing to confirm the critical dimensions before anything is made
  4. The part is machined or molded, inspected, and shipped

For tight-tolerance or safety-critical parts, shipping the physical part is better (it can be measured on a CMM). But for a great many parts, a good photo set plus careful measurements is a perfectly workable route.

Have a photo of the part you need? Send it with a few measurements to [email protected] or on WhatsApp. We'll turn it into a drawing, confirm it with you, and make the part — no CAD required.

Frequently Asked Questions

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Often yes — a photo plus a few key measurements is enough to start. The photo shows the shape and features; the measurements set the scale. A reverse-engineering shop builds a CAD model and drawing from this, confirms it with you, and makes the part. A photo with a ruler in frame is far more useful than a photo alone.

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Overall length, the main outer diameter or width, bore/hole diameters, any step lengths, and the thread size and pitch if there's a thread. Use calipers if you can, and note what the part fits.

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Use even lighting and a plain background, shoot straight-on from several sides, put a ruler or caliper in frame for scale, and take close-ups of threads, holes, and critical features. Multiple clear photos beat one perfect one.

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For many parts a photo plus measurements is enough. For tight-tolerance or safety-critical parts, the physical sample is better because it can be measured on a CMM. If you can ship the part, do; if not, a good photo set with careful measurements works.