{"title":"How to Make a Wooden Cutting Board (with Minimal Tools)","canonicalUrl":"https://www.craftingstepbystep.com/woodworking-crafts/how-to-make-a-cutting-board","category":{"slug":"woodworking-crafts","name":"Woodworking Crafts"},"creator":{"name":"MWA Woodworks","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCn2qOBTeRCHjqr-Mo-j0CBw","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oHShhxNyAQY"},"tldr":"Make a hardwood cutting board with just a table saw, drill, and sander - no jointer or planer needed. Step-by-step photos for the full build.","totalDurationSeconds":600,"difficulty":"medium","tools":["table saw","crosscut sled or miter gauge","bar clamps","orbital sander","trim router","chamfer router bit","paint scraper","spray bottle","cotton rag"],"materials":["walnut hardwood (pre-surfaced)","maple hardwood (pre-surfaced)","cherry hardwood (pre-surfaced)","Type Bond 3 water-resistant wood glue","sandpaper (80, 120, 180, 220 grit)","mineral oil and beeswax paste","plywood scraps for clamping cauls","packing tape"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Pick Your Hardwoods","text":"Walnut, maple, and cherry are the classic combo - each is a different color and the contrast looks great in the finished board. Stay away from softwoods like pine, fir, and cedar; they're too soft for cutting boards, dent easily under a knife, and can transfer flavors to food.If you don't have a jointer or planer, buy pre-surfaced lumber from a hardwood dealer. They've already done the planing for you, and most ship boards with one straight-line edge ripped on the table saw - which is exactly what you need to start cutting."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Cut Strips on the Table Saw","text":"Trim the rough edge off each board first to give yourself two parallel reference edges. Now rip strips from each board, mixing widths so you can vary the visual rhythm in the final board.Repeating-width trick: use one cut strip as a reference against the blade, then slide the fence in until your next board matches it. That gives you identical strips back-to-back without measuring each time. The key requirement here is that your saw can hold a perfect 90-degree angle - a portable table saw is fine as long as the blade is square to the table."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Lay Out the Color Design","text":"Aim for at least one strip of each wood species in every board so the colors stay balanced. The example uses three boards: a walnut base with two maples and a cherry, a maple base with two cherries and a walnut, and a cherry base with two maples and a walnut.Keep each board to four glue joints maximum. Without a planer, every extra joint is another spot where the glue-up can step out of flat - and you'll have to fix it with sandpaper. Wider boards (9-10 inches) and fewer joints make the difference between an easy sand and a frustrating one."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Glue Up with Type Bond 3","text":"Use a water-resistant wood glue. Type Bond 3 is the standard for cutting boards - water-resistant means the board can survive a sponge wipe-down or a spill without the joints failing. A condiment bottle gives you a fine bead so you can see the glue line at every joint.Add clamps slowly, watching that the strips don't slide up or down on each other. If you see squeeze-out along each joint, you have enough clamping pressure - cranking harder starves the joint and can introduce tension that warps the board. Plywood-scrap cauls with packing tape on one side keep the surface flat under the clamps."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Trim to Final Size","text":"After at least 8 hours in the clamps (overnight is better), pull the board out and scrape off any remaining glue with a paint scraper. Crosscut to your final length on the table saw using a crosscut sled or a miter gauge.Always reference the same side of the board against the fence for every cut. That guarantees each new cut is square to that one reference edge - critical when you don't have a jointer to true things up later."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Sand Through the Grits","text":"Start at 80 grit because you don't have a planer to flatten the glue-up. Move through 120, 180, and finish at 220.Pencil trick: scribble pencil marks across the board between each grit. When all the pencil is sanded off, you've worked the surface evenly and it's safe to step up to the next grit. Without this, it's easy to leave high spots untouched and waste time at finer grits where they'll show up as dull patches."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Chamfer the Edges","text":"A chamfer bit in a trim router gives clean 45-degree angles on every edge that look much sharper than a roundover. Run the router slowly along each edge, with the board held against a non-slip mat so it can't shift.If you don't have a router, a hand plane gets the same result. It takes a little longer but you get more control and there's less risk of grain tear-out, which a router will sometimes do at the end of a stroke."},{"number":8,"title":"Step 8: Pop the Grain and Apply Finish","text":"Spritz the sanded board with water from a spray bottle. The wood fibers stand up like the hairs on your arm when it gets cold, the grain darkens to its true color, and you get a real preview of how the finished board will look. Once dry, knock those raised fibers down with one final 220-grit pass and the board is silky smooth.Now rub on a paste of mineral oil and beeswax. Coat all sides liberally, let it sit for several hours, and the wood absorbs what it needs while leaving the wax behind to harden on the surface. Buff clean with a cotton rag until it's smooth. Do not bathe the board in mineral oil - long-grain boards don't soak up oil like end-grain butcher blocks do, and the excess will leach onto countertops for weeks."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-20T13:29:08.321Z","published":"2026-05-05T22:33:22.927Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}