Round Cutting Boards

What Resin Artists Are Doing With Cutting Boards (And Why the Wood Matters)

Spend enough time in the resin art world and one thing becomes obvious pretty fast. The wood underneath matters. A lot.Not just as a surface to pour on. The blank is part of the finished piece whether you want it to be or not.Hardwood cutting boards have become the go-to canvas for a lot of resin artists — and there are real reasons for that. Flat, stable, food-safe. Heavy enough to not move around on you. And honestly, good-looking before resin ever enters the picture. But not all wood is the same. And a lot of artists find that out the hard way. They ruin a pour on a garbage blank and have to start from scratch.This post exists so that doesn’t happen to you.We’re going to cover why hardwood works for resin, which species to use and when, what artists are actually making right now, how to prep your boards properly, and why the blank you start with is one of the most underrated decisions in the whole process.

The Wood Is Doing Work the Whole Time

Let’s get something out of the way first.When someone looks at a finished resin board, they’re not just looking at the resin. They’re looking at the whole thing. The grain showing through a translucent pour. The warm edge of a walnut board framing a deep blue wave. The pale maple surface making turquoise colours pop.The wood contributes to the visual even when it’s mostly covered up.That’s what separates a great piece from a mediocre one. The artist thought about the whole board, not just the pour. They picked their blank the way a painter picks a canvas. On purpose. Knowing it would change the result.Most beginners skip this. They grab whatever flat piece of wood is around, pour their resin, and wonder why it looks a little off. The technique might be perfect. The colour mixing might be great. But if the wood is the wrong species or the wrong thickness, the piece never quite comes together. You can feel it even if you can’t explain it.The fix is simple once you know what to look for.

Why Hardwood and Not Something Cheaper

Softwoods — pine, poplar, MDF — are easy to find and cheap. That’s the appeal. That’s also about where the appeal ends.Here’s what happens with soft or porous wood. Resin is a liquid when you pour it. It needs a surface that holds it on top while it cures. Porous wood pulls the resin down into the grain before it has time to set. You end up with a dull, uneven surface. Bubbles push up from air escaping the wood. The bond is weak. Even when the pour technique was solid, the finish looks off.Hardwood is dense. Tighter pores. Resin sits on top and cures properly — glossy, deep, clean. The bond holds. The surface forgives small technique errors in a way that soft wood just won’t.There’s also warping to think about. Resin heats up as it cures. That’s just chemistry — exothermic reaction, heat gets released. On a thin or low-quality blank, that heat warps the board. You come back the next day expecting a finished piece and find something curved and ruined. Solid hardwood holds its shape. It’s heavy and dense enough that curing resin doesn’t move it.And then there’s longevity. A proper hardwood piece lasts. It looks good on someone’s wall a decade from now. Cheap wood ages badly — edges split, surface lifts, the whole thing starts looking rough. If you’re selling your work, that matters a lot.

Maple: The Default Choice for a Reason

Canadian hard maple is what most resin artists reach for first. And honestly, most of them never really stop.The colour is the main reason. Maple is pale — close to white in some cuts — with a fine, tight grain. That light background is what makes resin colours do what they’re supposed to do. Blues look like blues. Greens look like greens. Metallics catch the light. On darker wood those same colours get muddy. On maple they pop.The grain on maple is subtle. It shows up, you know it’s wood, but it doesn’t compete with your pour. It adds character without taking over.Maple is also hard and stable. It machines well, sands evenly, and gives you a consistent surface. When you’re prepping blanks before a pour, maple doesn’t give you surprises.For ocean pours, geode designs, abstract colour work — anything where you want the resin to be the main event — maple is almost always the right call.

Cherry: The One People Sleep On

Cherry doesn’t get talked about enough.The colour starts out light — pinkish-tan — and deepens into a rich reddish-brown as it ages and sees light. That warm tone changes how certain resin colours read completely.Earth tones love cherry. Burnt orange, deep red, forest green, warm gold — all of these look incredible against a cherry background. The warmth in the wood pulls those colours together in a way that feels considered. Intentional.Cherry also works for ocean pours, just with a different mood than maple. Where maple gives you bright and crisp — midday at the beach — cherry gives you warm and moody. Sunset on the water. It’s a different feeling in the finished piece and some buyers respond to it more strongly.The grain is fine and fairly straight with occasional gentle movement. Beautiful without being loud.A lot of artists stick to maple out of habit and miss out on what cherry can do. Worth trying.

Walnut: When You Want the Wood to Be Part of the Story

Walnut is the dramatic one.Dark chocolate brown, purple undertones, grain that ranges from straight to genuinely stunning depending on the cut. Walnut is visually strong on its own. That’s the challenge — your resin has to hold its own next to it.Translucent and semi-translucent pours work best on walnut. Gold, bronze, copper metallic s are incredible on dark walnut. Deep jewel tones — navy, emerald, burgundy — work well. Light pastels tend to disappear.Some artists use walnut specifically because they want the wood to be part of the statement. You’re not covering the blank with resin — you’re letting the walnut show, and the resin adds to it. Live edge walnut with a subtle resin pour is its own thing right now and it’s beautiful work.Walnut costs more. It’s heavier and harder to source. If you’re working with walnut blanks, price your finished pieces accordingly. The market for dark walnut resin boards exists and it pays.

What Artists Are Actually Making

Ocean pours are everywhere and have been for a while now. Walk through any craft market, scroll through any resin art account, you’re going to see ocean boards. Blues, teals, whites — waves, foam, the whole visual language of the coast.There’s a reason this took off the way it did. The movement you can create with resin, the layering, the way white cells form in the crest of a wave — it photographs beautifully and it sells well. People connect with it.If you want to see what ocean boards look like when someone really knows what they’re doing, check out Ocean Boards by Eveline. She’s a maker based in St. Andrews By-the-Sea, New Brunswick — right on the Atlantic coast — and her boards look like someone captured the ocean in wood form. Every piece is one of a kind. The colour, the depth, the flow — it’s the kind of finished work that shows you what’s possible when the technique is dialed in and the materials are right. Worth looking at if you want to understand where the ceiling is on this style.Beyond ocean pours — geode designs are having a moment. Metallic, opaque colours, crystal formations mimicking agate cross-sections. They work on both maple and walnut depending on your palette.Abstract colour field pours are popular with artists coming from a painting background. No specific subject. Just colour, movement, composition. These can read as serious fine art when the colour work is strong.Engraved and resin-filled pieces are growing fast. A laser engraver cuts a design into the surface — text, a logo, an image — and resin fills the engraved area as a colour inlay. Corporate gifts, wedding gifts, personalized pieces. It bridges fine craft and personalization and the market for it is real.

Prepping Your Board

This step gets skipped. It shouldn’t.Start with a clean, dry board. Moisture in the wood causes adhesion problems and bubbling. If your boards just arrived, especially in cold weather, let them sit at room temperature for a day before you pour. Let the wood settle.Sand the surface. Resin needs something to grip. Start around 120 grit, finish at 220. Wipe everything down with a tack cloth after. Resin and dust don’t mix well.A seal coat helps on a lot of boards — especially figured or porous wood. This is a thin layer of resin applied before your design pour. It fills micro-pores and gives you a solid, consistent base to pour on. It adds time but it prevents problems.Tape your edges if you want clean sides. Some artists let the resin drip naturally and sand the sides clean after. Either approach works — it’s personal preference.Check your surface with a level before you pour. Resin is liquid. It will find any low spots. Shim the board if you need to. This sounds basic and it is. It also prevents a lot of uneven pours.Work at the right temperature. Somewhere between 21 and 24 Celsius is the target. Cold slows the cure and causes clouding. Too hot speeds things up unevenly. Your workspace temperature matters more than most people realize.

Thickness and Size: What Actually Works

Not every cutting board blank is right for resin work.Thickness affects stability. Thin boards warp during cure more easily. For resin work, 3/4 inch is the minimum you want to be working with. An inch is better. Thicker boards are heavier, more stable, and feel more substantial as a finished piece — which affects how people perceive them and what you can reasonably charge.Larger pours are harder. More resin means more heat, more risk of warping, more surface area to manage before the resin starts to gel. If you’re earlier in your resin journey, build your skills on smaller boards. Don’t order a batch of large blanks and practice on them.Paddle-shape boards are popular for a practical reason — the handle gives you something to hold when you’re moving the piece mid-pour to shift the resin around. It also photographs well. Rectangular and round shapes both work fine too. The shape is less important than the thickness and species.

Why Wholesale Makes Sense If You’re Selling

If you’re making one piece a year as a hobby, buy retail. No argument.But if you’re selling — even occasionally — the math changes fast.Retail pricing for quality hardwood blanks is not cheap. Add your resin, your pigments, your finishing supplies, your time. Retail blank pricing eats your margin in a way that makes it hard to price your work properly. Either you under price and work for almost nothing, or you price it right and customers push back because the number feels high to them even though it’s fair.Wholesale fixes the material side of that equation. Your cost per blank drops. Your margins open up. You can price your work at what it’s actually worth without apologizing for it.There’s also consistency. Buying wholesale from one supplier means your blanks are the same every time. Same thickness, same species, same quality. When you’re building a body of work or taking custom orders, that consistency matters. It makes your output more reliable and your quality control easier.We supply Canadian hardwood cutting boards — maple, cherry, walnut — wholesale to resin artists across Canada. 24-board minimum, priced in Canadian dollars, real Canadian hardwood. If you’ve been cobbling together blanks from different places and your results are inconsistent, that’s probably part of the reason.

The Business Side of Resin Art

A lot of resin artists start as hobbyists and end up running something real without planning to. The work sells. People see a finished ocean board and they want one. Custom requests start coming in. Suddenly you’re thinking about pricing and sourcing and social media.Know your costs. Every board, every pour, every supply. Add your time. That number is your floor. Pricing below it means you’re paying to work, which is a hobby model, not a business model.Photography matters more than most resin artists expect. The depth, the movement, the way light plays through resin — a good photo captures that. A bad photo makes a $350 piece look like a school project. Natural light, clean background, multiple angles. Learn to shoot your work or find someone who can.The gift market is where a lot of resin board sales happen. Weddings, housewarmings, corporate gifting, milestone birthdays. Ocean boards and geode pieces position naturally as premium gifts. Market them that way. Lead with the story — handmade, Canadian hardwood, one of a kind. Those words mean something to buyers.

Start With Good Wood

Everything in resin art is downstream of the blank you start with.Technique can be perfect. Colours can be inspired. Workspace can be dialed in. If the board is wrong — wrong species, wrong thickness, wrong quality — the piece doesn’t reach what it could have been.The artists doing the best work aren’t leaving this to chance. They know their materials. They buy consistently. They understand what maple does differently than cherry, what walnut brings that neither of the others can.That’s not complicated knowledge. It’s just paying attention to the right things.Start with good wood. Prep it right. Let your technique take it from there.