He engraved a set of oval plates for the Fables of Otto Voenius, published at Antwerp in 1608.
His most substantial works are eight large plates of the battles of Charles V and Francis I, executed in collaboration with Jode de Gheyn, the younger, after Antonio Tempesta.
[2] He engraved also the plates to Salomon de Caus's La perspective avec la raison des ombres et miroirs (1611)[3] He probably spent some time in England, as appears from his frontispiece to the first edition of the translation of the Bible published by royal authority in 1611, later known as the "King James Version", or the "Authorized Version".
[4] He also engraved a portrait of Henry, Prince of Wales, an oval print with an ornamental border.
[2] published by Pieter de Jode I in around 1611–12;[5] Another plate, of The Last Judgment, is signed "Cornelis Boel fecit", with no indication of the name of the painter.