Laser Engraved Gifts

Best Wood for Laser Engraving: Maple, Cherry, and Walnut Put to the Test

Someone asked me this last week. Same question I get constantly — what’s the best wood for laser engraving? I almost just said maple and left it at that. Honestly that’s the right answer 80% of the time. But it’s not the whole story and if you pick the wrong species for the wrong job you’re going to waste money and be annoyed with the results. So here’s the actual answer. The longer one. I’ve been selling hardwood cutting board blanks to laser engravers across Canada since 2016. Maple, cherry, walnut — all three go through lasers regularly and I hear back from people about the results. Good and bad. This is what I’ve actually learned, not what I think sounds reasonable.

The Thing Nobody Says Loudly Enough

Your settings matter less than your wood. There. Someone had to say it. New engravers spend hours in forums hunting for the perfect power and speed settings. And yeah, dialing those in matters. But if you’re working with the wrong wood, no settings are going to save you. The laser burns the surface — vaporizes the fiber and leaves a darker mark. How sharp that mark is, how readable, how consistent — that comes from the wood’s grain density and its base colour. Not from tweaking your DPI by 50. Soft wood with open grain burns like garbage. Tight-grained hardwood burns clean. That’s really the whole equation. Contrast is what you’re chasing. Dark mark, light background, readable result. The wood determines most of that. The American Hardwood Export Council’s species guide is worth bookmarking if you want to understand wood properties more broadly — but practically speaking, North American hardwoods are where you want to be.

Maple

Start here. Come back to this when you’re confused. Maple is the answer most of the time. Hard maple is pale — almost white, maybe a light cream colour. When you burn it, the engraved area goes dark brown. The contrast is excellent. Text is sharp. Photos render with actual detail. Logos look like they were printed, not burned. It sits around 1450 lbf on the Janka hardness scale, which sounds like trivia but it matters — that density means the grain is tight and uniform. No soft spots that absorb the laser differently than the area next to them. No surprises. You dial in your settings and they work the same way on board 50 as they did on board 1. It’s also forgiving in a way that cherry and walnut are not. Push the power too hard on maple and you get a deeper burn. You don’t get a ruined board. That margin matters when you’re learning and it still matters when you’re running a production batch at midnight. One thing — figured maple is not your friend for laser work. Curly, tiger, quilted maple — beautiful wood, but the irregular grain catches the laser unevenly. You’ll get inconsistent burn depth across a single piece. Save the fancy stuff for furniture. Straight grain maple for the laser, every time. If you’re building a business around engraved cutting boards, maple is your inventory backbone. The other species are add-ons.

Cherry — and Why More People Should Be Using It

I genuinely don’t understand why cherry gets overlooked in laser engraving circles. It makes some of the best-looking finished pieces I’ve seen come out of this process. Black cherry starts out a light pinkish-brown. Left alone, it darkens over time into a deep reddish-brown — one of those woods that gets better looking as it ages. When you burn it, the engraved areas go a warm dark brown rather than the charcoal you get on maple. The overall effect is rich and almost vintage-looking. Less stark than maple. More character. It photographs incredibly well. If you’re selling on Etsy or posting finished work on Instagram, a cherry board in decent lighting looks expensive in a way that’s hard to fake. I’ve had engravers tell me cherry boards outsell maple two to one at higher price points. Doesn’t surprise me at all. It’s softer than maple — around 950 lbf — which actually gives you a bit more control on fine detail work. A little less power to get a clean burn. Some engravers prefer cherry specifically for detailed designs because of this. The honest downside is variation. Cherry’s heartwood can be noticeably darker than the sapwood, sometimes on the same board. That’s not a defect — it’s just how the species grows. For custom one-off pieces it adds character. For a run of 100 identical corporate gifts where the client expects every board to look the same, it’s something you need to manage. Talk to your supplier about consistency if that matters for your orders. Oil a finished cherry board and watch what happens. The grain pops, the colour deepens, the engraved areas darken just slightly more. It’s a genuinely nice finished product. Clients notice the difference.

Walnut

Walnut is the complicated one. It’s stunning wood. Black walnut in a cutting board — that deep chocolatey brown with occasional grey or purple tones — looks expensive before you even touch it with a laser. Clients love it. It commands the highest price point of the three. All of that is true. It’s also the hardest of the three to get right on a laser and I want to be upfront about that. The problem is contrast. The base colour is dark. You’re trying to burn a dark mark into wood that’s already pretty dark. That contrast you rely on with maple — light background, dark burn, reads immediately — just isn’t there the same way. You have to approach walnut differently. What works: you go deep instead of just dark. More power, slower speed. You’re creating a slight recess in the surface so the shadow from the engraved area creates the readability, not just colour difference. Once you figure that out it works well. Getting there takes testing and some patience. Bold and simple designs work great on walnut. Clean text, strong logos, geometric shapes — these read clearly and look genuinely impressive. Fine-line detail work and photo engravings are harder. The dark background swallows subtlety. My honest advice: get maple dialed in first. Add walnut to your inventory once you have real experience. It rewards people who know what they’re doing.

The Short Version

Maple — light, high contrast, works on almost everything, same results every time. Your workhorse. Cherry — warm and beautiful, best for premium pieces, slight variation between boards. Your showpiece. Walnut — dark, bold designs only, steeper learning curve, highest price point. Your luxury tier. Most engravers I know run all three once they’re past the beginner stage. Maple for the bulk of orders, cherry and walnut for clients who are willing to pay more for something different.

What Doesn’t Work and Why MDF Keeps Getting Recommended Anyway

Pine. Cedar. Soft, open grain, uneven burns, fuzzy results. Cedar has resins that build up on your lens. Don’t bother. MDF gets recommended in a lot of beginner spaces and it drives me a little crazy. Yes it engraves. It also produces toxic fumes when you burn it because of the adhesive binders holding it together. Not “somewhat unpleasant” toxic — actually harmful. And it’s not food-safe, so for cutting board work it’s a complete non-starter regardless. Plywood has the same fume problem. The glue layers burn differently than the wood, which also gives you inconsistent depth across the engraving even when the surface looks uniform. Anything with a finish on it — paint, stain, oil — don’t run a laser over it until you know exactly what’s in that coating. Epilog Laser publishes a good materials guide on this from the machine side. The short version is that burning unknown coatings produces unknown fumes and that’s not a gamble worth taking.

Unfinished. Always Buy Unfinished.

This is not a complicated point but people get it wrong constantly. Any oil or finish on the wood surface changes how the laser interacts with it. Even mineral oil — even a light coat. The oil fills the pores and you get inconsistent burn depth, sometimes a slightly waxy look to the engraved area. It looks off. It is off. Engrave first on a bare surface. Finish after. The oil actually improves the engraving at that point — soaks into the burned area, darkens it slightly, makes the whole piece look more finished. It works better in that order for both the engraving and the board. When you’re sourcing blanks, be explicit about wanting unfinished stock. Some suppliers oil their boards before shipping and won’t mention it unless you ask.

Moisture Content (Don’t Skip This)

Wood that wasn’t properly dried holds moisture. Moisture is the enemy of a clean laser burn. When a laser hits wood with high moisture content, it spends energy turning water to steam before it can vaporize the fiber. Result is a lighter, blurrier burn. You push more power to compensate and start scorching the surface. It’s a mess. Kiln-dried hardwood at 6–8% moisture burns clean and predictable every time. The USDA Forest Products Lab Wood Handbook covers the science if you want it. Practically — ask your supplier if the stock is kiln-dried. Any real hardwood supplier will say yes without hesitation. Uncertainty is a red flag. Also — boards coming in from a cold truck in January need to sit at room temperature for a day before you engrave them. Temperature swings affect surface moisture. Small thing. Matters.

Why Cutting Boards Are Such Good Laser Blanks

I’m going to talk about cutting boards specifically here — obviously that’s what I sell — but there’s a real practical reason to pay attention to this even if you’re not buying from me. A cutting board is already built to a standard that happens to be perfect for laser engraving. Kiln-dried wood. Flat faces, sanded smooth. Consistent thickness across the board. No warping, no cupping, no rough spots. You take it out of the box and it’s ready to go under the laser. If you’ve ever tried to mill your own blanks from rough lumber you know how much time goes into just getting a flat, consistent surface. Jointer, planer, drum sander — that’s an hour or two of prep per batch before you touch the laser. A cutting board blank skips all of that. And then there’s the obvious thing — you’re selling a product people actually recognize. Not a “laser engraved wood blank.” A cutting board. Useful. Giftable. People know what it is and what it costs and why they’d want one. Custom engraved cutting boards are one of the most consistently strong sellers in personalized gifts, full stop. Wedding gifts, realtor closing gifts, corporate branded merch, restaurant branding — the market is proven and it doesn’t disappear. We supply unfinished maple, cherry, and walnut cutting board blanks to laser engravers across Canada. If you’re scaling up production and want to talk volume, see what we carry for laser engraving work and get in touch.

Quick Tips That’ll Save You From Learning the Hard Way

Test on scrap from the same board before you run the real piece. Every time. Online settings are starting points, not answers. Tape the surface first. Laser tape or transfer tape catches smoke residue that stains the surrounding wood. On light maple it shows clearly without it. Tape, engrave, peel. Takes an extra two minutes and makes a visible difference. Your lens is dirtier than you think it is. Wood smoke builds up on optics faster than most people expect. Dirty lens means less power at the surface. Check it before any production run. Ventilation. Not sometimes. Every time. Even clean hardwood produces smoke and particulate when burned. This one isn’t negotiable.

So What’s the Answer

Maple. If you need one answer, that’s it. Most designs, most clients, most use cases — maple does the job better than anything else. But if you’re trying to build something real — a product line with options at different price points for different clients — you want all three. Maple handles the volume. Cherry handles the premium tier. Walnut handles the clients who want the best and will pay for it. The wood isn’t a detail. It’s half the product. Treat it that way. If you’re sourcing blanks in volume and want a Canadian supplier who knows what laser engravers actually need, send us a quote request. We’ll get back to you quickly.