:QUOTE [quotetype:personal] The board you made will outlast the knives you use on it. :INFO Face Grain vs. Edge Grain vs. End Grain Face-grain boards show the wide face of the wood — easiest to make but harder on knife edges. Edge-grain boards present the long edge of the board — more durable, self-healing in a sense. End-grain boards (like a butcher block) present cross-sectional wood fiber — hardest to make but easiest on knives. For a first board, face-grain or edge-grain from a single thick plank is simplest. :COUNTER.half 1.5 to 2 Inch | :COUNTER.half Mineral Oil :PATH Mill Your Stock Flat and Square Joint and plane the board flat on all surfaces before cutting to shape. | :INFO Mill Your Stock Flat and Square Start with a wood blank slightly thicker than your target finished thickness. Joint one face flat with a hand plane or jointer. Plane the opposite face parallel. Joint one long edge square. Rip to final width. Cut to final length. For hand-only work: use a No. 5 bench plane for flattening and a No. 4 for final smoothing. :PATH Apply Glue and Clamp Edge-Grain Strips For an edge-grain board, rip multiple strips and glue face-to-face. | :INFO Apply Glue and Clamp Edge-Grain Strips For an edge-grain board: rip the plank into 1.5-inch wide strips. Arrange alternating grain direction to minimize cupping. Apply an even, thin coat of food-safe wood glue (Titebond II or III) to each mating face. Clamp with as many clamps as needed to achieve even, gapless joints. Let cure 24 hours before unclamping. :PATH Flatten After Glueup Hand plane the glued panel flat on both faces — use a diagonal pass first. | :INFO Flatten After Glueup After glueup, the panel will have glue squeeze-out and slight misalignment at joints. Scrape off dried glue with a card scraper. Use a No. 5 hand plane diagonally across the board first — this direction prevents grain tearout and levels high spots. Finish with straight strokes along the grain using a finely set No. 4 smoother. :PATH Oil and Finish Flood with mineral oil, let absorb, wipe, and repeat 3 to 5 times. | :INFO Oil and Finish Food-grade mineral oil is the only appropriate finish for cutting boards that contact food. Flood the entire surface with mineral oil. Let absorb for 20 minutes. Wipe off excess. Repeat 3 to 5 times over 24 hours until the wood stops absorbing. For a harder finish, apply a board cream of mineral oil and beeswax after the oil cures. :CHECKLIST Tools Needed [ ] Hand saw or table saw for ripping strips [ ] No. 5 and No. 4 hand planes [ ] Pipe clamps or bar clamps — at least 4 for a standard board [ ] Card scraper for glue removal [ ] Food-grade mineral oil [ ] Sandpaper through 180-grit for end-grain boards :NOTE Never Put a Wood Board in the Dishwasher High heat and prolonged moisture cause wood to warp, check, and crack. Hand wash only, dry immediately, and stand on edge to dry both faces evenly. Re-oil when the surface looks dry or after heavy use. A well-maintained board lasts decades. :QUOTE [quotetype:personal] Oil it, use it, oil it again. That is the entire maintenance schedule. :LINK https://www.popularwoodworking.com/woodworking-blogs/building-a-cutting-board/ Popular Woodworking — Building a Cutting Board by Hand