Round Cutting Boards

Resin Art on Wood: What Intermediate Artists Need to Know to Get Better Results

You’ve done a few pours. Resin doesn’t scare you anymore. You know the ratio, you own a torch, you’ve ruined enough pieces to know what went wrong.So why does something still feel off?Edges that aren’t quite right. Bubbles showing up late. The wood doing something unexpected underneath. These aren’t beginner mistakes. They’re the specific frustrations of someone who knows just enough to be confused by them.Wood is the variable most resin content ignores. Everyone talks about pigments and ratios and torch technique. Not enough people talk about what the wood itself is doing. That’s what this is about.

The Wood Is Not Just Sitting There

Here’s the thing about wood. It’s not inert. Never was.It expands and contracts. It has grain running in a specific direction. It has pores — some tight, some open — and those pores hold air. Certain species have natural oils sitting in the fibres. And unless that board was dried perfectly and stored in stable conditions, it might be releasing moisture you can’t measure without a meter.All of that is underneath your resin.Maple, cherry, walnut — all popular, all different, all doing their own thing under the surface. Dense wood is not the same as sealed wood. A tight-grained maple board still has pores. Small ones. But they’re there and they’re full of air.Those random bubbles that appear an hour after your pour looked perfect? That’s the wood warming up and pushing air out. The resin warmed up too. The pores opened slightly. Air came through.Once you actually understand that, the solution is obvious.

Seal the Wood. Before Every Pour.

No seal coat is the most common mistake intermediate artists make. Full stop.Thin layer of resin — same mix ratio you’d use for anything else — brushed directly onto the wood surface. Work it in with a brush or your finger through a glove. Get it into the grain. Don’t put it on thick. Even coverage is what you’re after, not depth.Torch it lightly right after. Pop whatever bubbles come up immediately. Then leave it completely alone until it gels. Still tacky, not wet. Somewhere between four and eight hours for most resins at room temperature.Your main pour goes on top of that tacky layer. Chemical bond. No separation, no lifting, no delamination later.The bubble difference between a sealed board and a raw board is dramatic. Not subtle. The first time you seal first you’ll wonder what you were doing before.

Maple, Cherry, Walnut — Not the Same Thing

People treat these three like they’re interchangeable. They’re not.Maple is forgiving. Light colour, tight grain, no oil issues. Resin bonds to it reliably. If the colour accuracy of your pigments matters — and it should — maple gives you the cleanest read. White on maple looks white. White on walnut looks grey-ish. Different piece entirely.Cherry has a warm tone that deepens over time even after resin is applied. That can be great. It can also slowly shift the colour story of a piece you thought was finished. UV-stable resin helps slow it. Doesn’t stop it. Know that going in.Walnut is where people run into adhesion problems. The oils in walnut are natural and they’re real and they interfere with bonding if the surface isn’t clean. Sand it. Wipe it down with isopropyl alcohol. Let that fully evaporate. Seal coat. Do all of it. Skip one step and you might not see the failure for weeks — resin lifting quietly at the edge of a piece you already sold.End grain cuts are worse. End grain absorbs unevenly. It’ll drink resin in one spot and bead it up in another. Multiple thin seal coats. More resin than makes sense. Still expect it to be difficult.

Prep Work Is Unglamorous and Completely the Point

The pour is not where the work happens. The prep is where the work happens.Board needs to be flat. Actually flat. Even a small warp and your resin finds the low side. Level it, shim it, whatever it takes. This matters more than anything else on this list.Sand to 220 grit. Not finer. Too smooth and resin can’t grip bare wood properly. After sanding — dry cloth, tack cloth, isopropyl wipe. In that order. Let the alcohol evaporate completely before you touch the surface with anything else.Dust kills pours. Most of the dust comes from the sanding you just did. If you’re sanding and pouring in the same room, you’re contaminating your own work. Either wait a long time or use two different spaces.Temperature. 21 to 24 Celsius for the workspace and for the resin itself. Cold resin is thick and sluggish. Cold resin on cold wood cures slowly and unevenly. Bring your resin inside hours before you plan to use it. Don’t heat it with hot water — moisture contamination causes cloudiness. Just let it warm up naturally.

Mixing Problems Are Very Common and Very Avoidable

The ratio isn’t a suggestion. It’s chemistry.Off-ratio mixes don’t always look wrong. Sometimes they cure mostly fine and leave one soft sticky patch in the middle of an otherwise decent pour. Sometimes they don’t cure at all. Either way the piece is done.Complacency is the enemy here. Intermediate artists stop being careful about mixing because they’ve done it so many times. That’s precisely when it goes wrong.Digital scale every time. Weight ratios are more reliable than volume measurement, especially with thicker resins. Slow mixing. Scrape the sides and the bottom of the cup on every pass. Then do the double-cup — pour into a second container and mix again. It catches unmixed resin that was clinging to the sides of cup one.Mixed resin warms up. That’s normal. That’s the reaction happening. If your cup stays cold after five minutes of mixing, stop and figure out why before you pour anything.Pigments go in after mixing. Slowly. Mica powder dumped in fast traps air. Alcohol inks move differently than pigment pastes. Neither of them behaves the same as liquid dyes. Test every new pigment on scrap before it touches a real piece.

Your Working Window Is Fixed. Work Inside It.

Most standard epoxies give you 30 to 45 minutes. Some give you less.Learn your specific resin. Not approximately. Exactly.The first half of that window is for doing things — moving colour, creating flow, feathering. The second half is for finishing and getting out of the way. The closer you push to the gel point the less control you have and the more likely you are to drag a cured streak through wet resin.Torch is for bubbles. Two or three seconds over any spot. Keep it moving. Stationary torch on resin causes scorching, yellowing, edge pulling. On wood it also heats the board enough to push new off-gassing through a surface you just fixed. Short passes. Wait. Pass again if needed.

Edges Are Where Good Work Goes to Die

Clean top surface, messy dripping sides. Happens constantly.Elevate the board before you pour. Cups, pour stands, anything. You need access to the underside or the drips will cure into permanent streaks.Check every 20 to 30 minutes for the first two hours. Wipe the underside. Catch drips before they harden. It’s annoying. It’s necessary.Painter’s tape on the bottom edge gives you a clean line. Peel it at the tacky stage — not after full cure. Full cure means the tape rips the edge when it comes off.Doing all sides? Don’t try it in one pour. Top and sides. Cure fully. Flip. Bottom separately. Takes more time. Worth it.

Curing Means Hands Off

Cover the piece. Cardboard box is fine. Dust, pet hair, floating debris — all of it lands in uncovered resin. Every time.Touch-dry in 24 hours doesn’t mean finished. Mechanical hardness on a thick pour can take a full week. Sand too early and you gum up the paper and damage the surface.Level surface. No vibration. Ripples and orange peel texture during cure come from movement. Find somewhere stable and leave it there.

Wet Sanding and Polish

Cured resin has flaws. High spots, dust nibs, edge drips that got past you. Wet sanding fixes all of it.400 grit to start. Work up — 800, 1000, 1500, 2000 if you want glass. Keep water on the surface. Check often.Hazy after sanding is normal. Automotive plastic polish brings clarity back. Soft cloth, circular motion first then straight lines. Takes a few minutes. Results are good.Bare wood sections get mineral oil or hardwax oil. Food-safe. Makes the wood and resin look like they belong together instead of two separate materials that ended up on the same board.

Bad Wood Makes Everything Harder

Technique only goes so far. Bad material fights back.Warped stock. Improperly dried boards. Wrong species for what you’re trying to do. These aren’t minor issues. They create problems that technique can’t fully solve. You compensate for a while. Eventually the material wins.Flat, properly dried hardwood in consistent dimensions is not a luxury. It’s the foundation. When the wood is right, you stop spending energy on damage control.The pours get more predictable. The results get more consistent. You stop guessing what went wrong and start knowing what went right.That’s the actual difference between intermediate work and work that looks professional. Not a better torch. Not more expensive pigments.Better wood. Proper prep. Everything else builds on that.