Bevel Cut June 2025
By Andrew Davis
A recent study published by the American Society of Glue Manufacturers concluded that there are more YouTube videos on cutting boards than for any other subject including politics, fashion, health, sex, and travel. Cutting boards indeed were one of the items featured at last year’s EMGW social following Jeff Clunie’s group project.
A few years ago, once my scrap bin overflowed, I took a woodworking diversion and decided to make a few simple cutting boards or charcuterie servers for my wife and adult children. That was the first time around; shortly thereafter I graduated to end grain cutting boards. Now I’ve got the bug and want to make more complex boards when I get the chance. Here are some observations from my dabbling with this woodworking domain.
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| End grain cutting board – early edition |
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End grain mosaic (or chaos) design based on FWW article – one of several I have made |
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| Edge grain design for trivet |
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3-D design from class taught by Alex Snodgrass |
▪ Once you go down this path, you start to value your scraps like never before. Since cutting boards can be of any length, width, or thickness supported by your jointer and planer, no scrap need go to waste.
▪ I find that good looking cutting boards make great house (or Christmas) gifts – much more impressive than a wine or cheese basket. I have gifted three “chaos” boards in this way and the recipients were duly impressed.
▪ If your cutting board is impressive, people often suggest that you should go into the business of making and selling them. Don’t take the bait. Unless you are set up for mass production (and marketing) or have access to lots of FREE wood, the time, energy, materials cost for non-waste wood is prohibitive. A kit of wood from a local retailer can run $50-60 for just the raw stock. I often respond to these business suggestions that after careful study, I believe I would be making less than $0.50 per hour for my efforts.
▪ Many of the cutting board designs today involve a glue-up followed by a clean-up, flattening, and then a re-slicing routine. Wash, rinse and repeat. The chaos board seen here involved 5 such cycles.
▪ Cutting boards are a great way to use up all your glue. Don’t even think about hide glue.
▪ If one side of your cutting board has a minor flaw, you can put rubber feet on that side and no one will ever see it unless you tell them about it. As they say, an expert woodworker knows how to fix or hide his mistakes.
▪ If your cutting board is especially interesting or just good looking, you will find that people are afraid to cut on them. They don’t want to scratch it. A tip from Alex Snodgrass: don’t put rubber feet on your boards – just use one side for cutting and the other side as a trivet or serving tray.
▪ While some designs start with the table saw blade at an odd angle, at some point in the process it is important that the blade be as close to 90 degrees as possible. The same holds true for the fence and your jointer.
Readers React to Last Month’s Bevel Cut
Hi Andrew,
I'll confess that I'm not wild about the epoxy craze, but I'm grateful that you've shared first=hand experience with the stuff. The huge range of options is pretty cool and the costs are sobering. Makes the rate of lumber inflation look tame by comparison. My limited experience with epoxy as an adhesive and with Total Boat's epoxy finishes has always reminded me that the ventilation in my shop is wanting. The stuff stinks! How do you handle that issue? I
enjoyed the Baskin-Robbins reference. For my money, I'd rather buy ice cream than epoxy, but that's just me.
Rob C
Andrew: You didn’t address the fundamental issue in the May Bevel Cut essay. Is “resin art” like CNC really woodworking? If you don’t include a dovetail or a mortise and tenon joint, are you practicing the craft? Zeke W