Cutting Board Blanks: The Complete Guide for Laser Engravers and Pyrography Artists
The blank is where everything starts.
Not the machine. Not the design file. Not the tip set or the power settings. Before any of that matters, you need a surface that’s going to perform consistently — one that takes a burn cleanly, holds its shape, and looks the same across every board in a batch.
Most beginners spend weeks dialling in their equipment before realizing the variable they never controlled was the wood itself. This post fixes that. What cutting board blanks actually are, which species work for which applications, what separates a good blank from a bad one, and how sourcing in bulk changes the economics of running a serious operation.
What Cutting Board Blanks Are
A cutting board blank is an unfinished hardwood board — no oil, no wax, no coating, nothing applied to the surface. Just raw sanded wood in a consistent dimension, ready for whatever comes next. The “blank” terminology comes from the maker community. Laser engravers and pyrography artists started borrowing cutting boards as their preferred working surface because the dimensions are consistent, the hardwood species are ideal for burning, and wholesale pricing makes batch production viable. The name stuck. A cutting board blank and a pyrography blank and a laser engraving blank are all the same thing — a flat, unfinished hardwood board in a standard format. What it’s not: a finished cutting board sold at retail. Those are usually pre-oiled, sometimes pre-waxed, and occasionally treated with a food-safe lacquer. Any of those finishes turn a usable blank into a problem. The finish interferes with burn consistency for laser work. It blocks epoxy adhesion for resin. It changes how heat transfers through the surface for pyrography. A blank that’s been “finished for your convenience” is convenient for a home cook and a headache for a maker.Which Species for Which Application
Canadian hardwood cutting board blanks — species at a glance
All three ship unfinished — no oil, no wax, no coating. 24-board minimum per SKU. Air assist mandatory on walnut. Test burn on cherry and walnut before committing to a production run.
Hard Maple
Hard maple is where almost everyone starts, and for most applications it’s where they stay. Acer saccharum — Sugar Maple — Janka hardness around 1,450 lbf. The surface is pale, almost cream-coloured, and the grain is tight and even. That pale surface is what makes maple the default for both laser engraving and pyrography: burn marks read dark against light, contrast is high, and fine detail stays legible even at small scale. Batch consistency is maple’s other major advantage. Order 48 maple blanks from a good domestic supplier and all 48 will burn at the same settings with the same result. That predictability is what makes maple the right choice for large personalized runs — wedding favours, corporate programs, anything where the output needs to look matched across dozens of pieces.Cherry
Cherry is the step-up species. The warm reddish-brown base tone adds visual richness that maple doesn’t have, and the grain is slightly more visible — which adds depth in botanical motifs, script lettering, and organic designs. The tradeoff is that cherry burns faster than maple at the same settings. Fine hairlines and small text can go muddy if you transfer maple settings directly. Test burn every new design when switching species. The per-board cost is higher than maple, and for applications where the warm tone adds something specific to the design, it’s worth it.Walnut
Walnut is the destination species for both applications. Dark base, dramatic grain, Janka around 1,010 lbf. For laser work, the burn effect inverts — lighter material is revealed against dark rather than dark marks appearing on light. For pyrography, the same reversal applies. Walnut also generates more smoke under heat than maple or cherry, so air assist for laser work and proper ventilation for pyrography are non-negotiable. Not the starting place for a beginner. Worth coming back to once you know exactly what you’re doing on the other two species.Formats and What They’re Used For
Common cutting board blank formats — proportional size comparison
Most ordered
Rectangle
12×18″
Paddle
With handle
Apple
7×10″
Teardrop
7×11″
Round
8″ dia.
Volume format
12×18″ Rectangle
Ships flat, photographs well, works for most layouts. Start here.
Gift format
Paddle board
Natural display quality. Easy to hang. Visual boundary for resin work.
Favour format
Apple / teardrop
Lower price point. Seasonal gift markets. Wedding and event favours.