this post was submitted on 12 Jul 2024
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Woodworking

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So I just picked up this 12"×6"×10' maple beam at an auction today and had to chop off two feet of it to fit it in my car. I'm thinking of making a couple end-grain carving boards for friends with what was cut off.

I'm tentatively thinking of just slicing it into 2" cookies and gluing them together, but I've never seen a cutting board like this that wasn't a collection of like 1" pieces glued together. Is there any reason not to use larger pieces when gluing up a cutting board? Thanks in advance

This is the face that was cut today, feels bone-dry

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[–] MajorMajormajormajor@lemmy.ca 4 points 4 months ago

Something you can do is to alternate the grain pattern to prevent cupping and bowing (like what is done with a table).

If you're looking at the cutting board from top down (and rotated 90 degrees):

( )
) (

With each bracket representing the grain pattern.