Discover the World of Resin Crafts with Epoxy Art Boards
Resin art isn’t going away. Walk through any craft fair, scroll Etsy for five minutes, check what’s moving in boutique gift shops. Cutting boards keep showing up as the base. There’s a reason for that.
Wood just works better than most surfaces. Not a sales pitch. Ask anyone who’s poured on both acrylic and hardwood. The wood wins.
Here’s what’s worth knowing before you spend anything.
All three are available in our wholesale hardwood cutting board collection.
What Wood Does That Other Surfaces Don’t
Acrylic panels are everywhere. Glass works fine. Canvas is classic. But none of them have what a hardwood board has — actual weight, real grain, warmth underneath the resin that changes how the whole piece looks. When epoxy sits on top of maple or walnut, the grain shows through. You get depth. Layers. That effect is hard to fake on synthetic stuff. It just doesn’t happen the same way. Also — and this is practical — hardwood stays flat. Real flat. A thin acrylic panel flexes when you pick it up. Flexible surface plus curing resin equals cracks. Hardwood doesn’t move. Your pour cures the way you set it up.Maple vs Cherry vs Walnut — Yes It Matters
Three species. All different. All good for different reasons. Maple is light. Creamy, almost white. Tight grain that doesn’t soak up resin, just holds it on top. Colours pop on maple like crazy — bright blues, hot orange, neons, anything with contrast. Most resin artists start with maple and a lot of them never switch. It’s predictable and that predictability is worth something when you’re learning. Cherry runs warmer. There’s a reddish-brown tone in there that gets richer over time, which is actually a cool feature — your board changes a little as it ages. Earth tones work really well on cherry. Amber, rust, dark green, terracotta. If maple is the clean modern choice, cherry is the cozy rustic one. Walnut is the showoff. Dark, almost brown-black, rich grain. You put white or gold resin on walnut and people lose their minds a little. It photographs beautifully, which matters if you’re selling online. Walnut pieces tend to price higher. People see walnut and they already think quality before they even look at the art on top.Quick Comparison: Maple vs Cherry vs Walnut for Resin Art
| Maple | Cherry | Walnut | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Colour | Light, creamy white | Warm reddish-brown | Dark chocolate brown |
| Grain | Tight, uniform | Medium, subtle | Open, more visible |
| Best pigment colours | Bold brights, neons, deep blues | Earth tones, ambers, greens | Metallics, white, pastels |
| Resin absorption | Low — sits on top cleanly | Medium | Medium-high — flood coat recommended |
| Best for | Beginners, vibrant pours | Earthy and natural looks | Premium, high-contrast pieces |
| Overall vibe | Clean and crisp | Warm and rustic | Rich and dramatic |