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Maple Wood Guide: Uses, Colour, Grain, Janka Hardness, Finishing & Project Ideas

Wood Species Guide > Maple Wood

Maple Wood Guide: Uses, Colour, Grain, Janka Hardness, Finishing & Project Ideas

Maple is a light-coloured hardwood known for its clean appearance, strength, hardness, smooth grain, and wide use in cutting boards, furniture, shelves, cabinetry, dowels, accents, turning blanks, and custom woodworking projects. Hard maple is especially valued for durability, while curly maple and ambrosia maple are chosen for figure, colour variation, and decorative character.

This guide explains what maple wood is, the difference between hard maple, soft maple, curly maple, and ambrosia maple, how hard maple is, how maple machines and finishes, what projects it is best for, and how to choose the right maple lumber for your next build.

Shop Maple Wood at Jeff Mack Supply

Walnut wood species guide graphic showing dark brown colour tones, straight to wavy grain, Janka hardness, and common woodworking uses

What Is Maple Wood?

Maple is a popular North American hardwood used for cutting boards, furniture, shelves, cabinetry, flooring, dowels, butcher blocks, workbenches, musical instruments, and decorative woodworking. It is known for its light colour, smooth texture, strength, and clean modern appearance.

In woodworking, “maple” can refer to several related commercial categories. Hard maple usually refers to sugar maple, also called rock maple. Soft maple refers to a group of maple species that are generally softer and easier to machine than hard maple. Curly maple is maple with a wavy figure pattern, and ambrosia maple is maple with natural streaking and character caused by ambrosia beetle activity.

Quick Take: Maple is a great choice when you want a strong, light-coloured hardwood with a clean look. Choose regular maple for strength and simplicity, curly maple for decorative figure, and ambrosia maple for rustic character and dramatic streaking.

Maple Wood Quick Specs

Property Maple Wood Details
Common Names Maple, Hard Maple, Sugar Maple, Rock Maple, Soft Maple, Curly Maple, Ambrosia Maple
Primary Hard Maple Scientific Name Acer saccharum
Wood Type Domestic hardwood
Typical Colour Cream, pale tan, light brown, or off-white; ambrosia maple may include grey, brown, tan, and mineral-like streaking
Grain Usually straight and subtle; curly maple has wavy figure; ambrosia maple has streaks and character markings
Texture Fine and even, with a smooth finished appearance
Hard Maple Janka Hardness Approximately 1,450 lbf
Hard Maple Average Dried Weight Approximately 44 lbs/ft³
Workability Strong and durable; machines well with sharp tools, but hard maple can burn or tear out if tools are dull
Best Uses Cutting boards, butcher blocks, furniture, shelves, cabinetry, dowels, boxes, handles, turning, accents, and decorative woodworking
Beginner Friendly? Yes, but hard maple is dense and requires sharp tools
Outdoor Use? Usually better for indoor projects
Best Finish Clear finish, hardwax oil, cutting board oil, water-based finish, or durable topcoat depending on the project

Hard Maple vs Soft Maple vs Curly Maple vs Ambrosia Maple

Maple can be confusing because the same word is used for multiple commercial categories. The right choice depends on whether you care most about hardness, appearance, figure, character, price, or ease of working.

Maple Type What It Means Best For
Hard Maple A dense, strong maple category commonly associated with sugar maple and rock maple. Cutting boards, butcher blocks, furniture, shelves, work surfaces, and high-wear projects.
Soft Maple A commercial group of maple species that are generally softer and easier to machine than hard maple. Furniture, painted projects, cabinetry, trim, panels, and projects where extreme hardness is not required.
Curly Maple Maple with a wavy, shimmering figure pattern. It is not a separate species; it is a figure pattern found in some maple boards. Decorative boards, furniture accents, boxes, guitars, serving boards, handles, and premium visual projects.
Ambrosia Maple Maple with natural streaks, holes, and colour variation caused by ambrosia beetle activity. Rustic furniture, shelves, signs, cutting boards, charcuterie boards, epoxy projects, dowels, and character-rich DIY builds.

What Is Maple Wood Best Used For?

Maple is one of the most useful hardwoods in woodworking because it is strong, clean-looking, and available in multiple visual styles. Hard maple is often chosen when durability matters, while curly maple and ambrosia maple are chosen when the appearance of the wood is a major part of the project.

Project Type Is Maple a Good Choice? Why It Works
Cutting Boards Excellent Hard maple is one of the most popular woods for cutting boards and butcher blocks because it is hard, durable, and light in colour.
Furniture Excellent Maple is strong, clean-looking, and works well for modern furniture, tables, desks, legs, shelves, and cabinets.
Shelves Excellent Maple shelves have a bright, clean appearance and work well in modern spaces.
Cabinetry Excellent Maple is commonly used for cabinet doors, drawer fronts, painted cabinetry, natural cabinetry, and built-ins.
Charcuterie Boards Excellent Maple works well on its own or paired with walnut, cherry, purpleheart, padauk, or ambrosia maple for contrast.
Epoxy Projects Very Good Light maple contrasts well with dark resin colours, while ambrosia maple adds natural streaking and character.
Dowels and Handles Excellent Maple is strong, clean, and useful for dowels, plugs, handles, furniture parts, and craft components.
Outdoor Projects Usually Not Ideal Maple is generally better for indoor woodworking projects. For outdoor use, choose a more weather-suitable species.

Maple Colour, Grain & Appearance

Maple is usually light in colour, ranging from creamy white to pale tan or light brown. This makes it one of the best hardwoods for bright, clean, modern projects. It also creates excellent contrast when paired with darker woods like walnut or colourful exotics like purpleheart and padauk.

Standard maple usually has a subtle, straight grain and a smooth appearance. Curly maple has a wavy figure that can create a shimmering effect after sanding and finishing. Ambrosia maple has streaks, colour variation, and small character marks that make each board look unique.

Maple can vary from board to board. Some boards are very pale and clean, while others have darker mineral streaks, figure, curl, ambrosia markings, or natural colour variation. If your project requires a consistent look, lay out your boards before cutting and finishing.

Important: Maple’s light colour makes sanding marks, glue squeeze-out, burn marks, and blotchy stain easier to notice. Take extra care during sanding and always test your finish before applying it to the full project.

Is Maple a Hardwood?

Yes. Maple is a hardwood. Hard maple is one of the harder common domestic hardwoods used in woodworking, which is why it is popular for cutting boards, butcher blocks, flooring, work surfaces, furniture, and high-wear projects.

Hard maple has a Janka hardness of approximately 1,450 lbf. That makes it harder than walnut, cherry, white oak, and red oak. Soft maple is still a hardwood, but it is generally softer and easier to machine than hard maple.

Is Maple Wood Easy to Work With?

Maple can be very rewarding to work with, but hard maple is dense and less forgiving than softer woods. Sharp tools are important. Dull blades and bits can burn the wood, leave rough surfaces, or cause tearout, especially in curly or figured maple.

Process Maple Performance Shop Tip
Sawing Cuts well with sharp blades Use a sharp blade and steady feed rate. Maple can burn if you move too slowly.
Planing Usually planes well, but figured maple can tear out Take light passes and watch grain direction, especially with curly maple.
Routing Routes cleanly with sharp bits Use multiple shallow passes instead of one heavy cut.
Sanding Sands smooth but shows sanding mistakes Do not skip grits. Remove machine marks fully before finishing.
Gluing Glues well Make sure edges are clean, flat, and freshly prepared before glue-up.
Staining Can blotch if stained poorly Maple often looks best natural. If staining, test first and consider a conditioner, dye, or gel stain.

Best Finish for Maple Wood

Maple usually looks best with a clean finish that keeps the wood bright and natural. Clear finishes, hardwax oils, water-based finishes, and food-safe board oils can all work depending on the project.

If you want maple to stay as light as possible, test a water-based finish or a finish designed to minimize ambering. If you want the grain or curly figure to pop, oil-based finishes and hardwax oils can add more warmth and depth. For cutting boards and serving boards, use a food-safe cutting board oil or wax.

Project Recommended Finish Type Why
Cutting Boards Food-safe cutting board oil and wax Easy to apply, maintain, and refresh over time.
Furniture Hardwax oil, clear oil, water-based finish, lacquer, or durable clear topcoat Protects the surface while keeping the maple clean and natural-looking.
Shelves Hardwax oil, clear oil, or water-based finish Good for a clean, modern look with moderate protection.
Curly Maple Oil, hardwax oil, or clear finish tested on an offcut The right finish can make the curl and figure stand out dramatically.
Ambrosia Maple Clear oil, hardwax oil, or board finish Enhances the natural streaks and character without hiding them.
Epoxy Projects Hardwax oil, oil finish, or polished epoxy system The best choice depends on whether the final surface is mostly wood, mostly epoxy, or both.

Recommended Maple Finishing Supplies

Is Maple Good for Cutting Boards?

Yes. Hard maple is one of the best and most common woods for cutting boards, butcher blocks, and food-prep surfaces. It is hard, durable, light in colour, and pairs beautifully with darker woods like walnut and cherry.

Maple is also a great choice for edge grain and end grain cutting boards. For cutting boards, use properly dried hardwood, avoid unstable defects, sand thoroughly, and finish with a food-safe cutting board oil or wax. Ambrosia maple can be used for decorative serving boards, but for heavy cutting surfaces, choose solid, stable material with minimal defects.

Is Maple Good for Epoxy Projects?

Maple is very good for epoxy projects, especially when you want contrast. Light maple pairs well with black, blue, green, red, bronze, gold, pearl, white, and metallic epoxy colours. Ambrosia maple is especially useful for epoxy serving boards because the natural streaks and voids create a lot of visual interest.

When using maple with epoxy, make sure the wood is dry, clean, and properly prepared. Remove dust, loose fibres, soft areas, and debris from cracks or voids before pouring resin. For deeper pours, use a deep pour epoxy. For shallow fills or coatings, use the correct epoxy system for the pour depth.

Helpful Epoxy Links

What Maple Wood Should I Buy?

The best maple to buy depends on the project. Cutting boards, shelves, furniture parts, dowels, decorative accents, and epoxy projects all benefit from different maple types and sizes.

Project Goal Best Maple Option Recommended Link
Small DIY projects, signs, boxes, trays, and crafts 3/4" maple boards Shop 3/4" Maple Select a Size
Thicker furniture parts, shelves, legs, and heavier builds 1.75" thick maple boards Shop 1.75" Maple Boards
Decorative projects, figured boards, gifts, and accents Curly maple boards Shop Curly Maple Boards
Rustic projects, serving boards, epoxy work, and character pieces Ambrosia maple boards Shop Ambrosia Maple Boards
Dowels, furniture parts, handles, plugs, and craft components Ambrosia maple dowels Shop Ambrosia Maple Dowels
Unsure what maple product you need Browse the full maple collection Shop All Maple Wood
Unsure what size you need Start with board foot calculations and project layout Read the Board Foot Guide

Shop Maple Wood for Your Next Project

Jeff Mack Supply carries maple boards, curly maple, ambrosia maple, thick maple boards, dowels, and project-ready maple wood for woodworkers, furniture makers, epoxy artists, and DIYers. Order online or visit us in-store in Mississauga.

Shop All Maple Wood →

Maple vs Other Woods

Maple is often compared to walnut, cherry, white oak, birch, ash, and beech. It is usually chosen when you want a strong, light-coloured hardwood with a clean and durable surface.

Comparison Main Difference Best Choice If...
Maple vs Walnut Maple is lighter and harder. Walnut is darker, richer, and more dramatic. Choose maple for cutting boards and light modern projects. Choose walnut for dark premium furniture and contrast.
Maple vs Cherry Maple is lighter and harder. Cherry is warmer, redder, and darkens more noticeably over time. Choose maple for a clean light look. Choose cherry for warm furniture and aging character.
Maple vs White Oak Maple is smoother and lighter. White oak has more visible grain and a warmer brown tone. Choose maple for smooth, clean, light projects. Choose white oak for visible grain and modern warmth.
Maple vs Birch Both are light-coloured woods, but hard maple is usually harder and more durable than many birch options. Choose maple for durability and cutting boards. Choose birch for plywood, utility projects, or lighter-duty builds.
Maple vs Ash Maple has a smoother, quieter grain. Ash has a bolder open grain and more visible texture. Choose maple for a clean look. Choose ash for strong grain and a more pronounced wood pattern.

Common Mistakes When Working With Maple

Using Dull Tools

Hard maple is dense and can burn or tear out when tools are dull. Use sharp blades, bits, and cutters for cleaner results.

Staining Maple Without Testing

Maple can blotch with stain. Always test first and consider a clear finish, conditioner, dye, or gel stain if you need colour control.

Skipping Sanding Grits

Maple’s light colour can reveal sanding marks. Sand evenly and remove machine marks before finishing.

Assuming All Maple Is the Same

Hard maple, soft maple, curly maple, ambrosia maple, and spalted maple can look and perform differently. Choose based on your project.

Expecting Curly Maple to Look Figured Before Finish

Curly figure often becomes much more dramatic after sanding and finishing. Test your finish to see how the curl will pop.

Using Character Maple for the Wrong Surface

Ambrosia maple is beautiful, but boards with holes, streaks, or soft areas should be selected carefully for cutting boards or food-contact projects.

Maple Wood FAQs

Is maple wood good for beginners?

Yes. Maple can be beginner friendly, but hard maple is dense and requires sharp tools. Beginners may find ambrosia maple and soft maple easier to machine than very hard, dense maple boards.

What colour is maple wood?

Maple is usually cream, pale tan, light brown, or off-white. Curly maple has figure, while ambrosia maple often includes grey, brown, tan, and mineral-like streaks.

Is maple harder than walnut?

Hard maple is harder than walnut. Hard maple is approximately 1,450 lbf on the Janka scale, while black walnut is approximately 1,010 lbf.

Is maple harder than white oak?

Hard maple is slightly harder than white oak based on Janka hardness. Hard maple is approximately 1,450 lbf, while white oak is approximately 1,350 lbf.

Is maple good for cutting boards?

Yes. Hard maple is one of the best and most common woods for cutting boards and butcher blocks. It is hard, durable, light in colour, and pairs well with walnut, cherry, and other contrasting woods.

Is maple good for furniture?

Yes. Maple is excellent for furniture, shelves, cabinetry, table parts, legs, drawers, and built-ins. It is strong, clean-looking, and works well in both modern and traditional designs.

What is curly maple?

Curly maple is maple with a wavy figure pattern that creates a shimmering appearance after sanding and finishing. It is not a separate species; it is a figured version of maple.

What is ambrosia maple?

Ambrosia maple is maple with natural streaks and character markings caused by ambrosia beetle activity. It is popular for rustic furniture, serving boards, shelves, signs, dowels, and epoxy projects.

Does maple stain well?

Maple can be stained, but it can also blotch if not prepared properly. Many woodworkers prefer a clear finish, dye, gel stain, or tested finish schedule instead of applying regular stain directly.

Where can I buy maple wood in Canada?

You can shop maple wood online at Jeff Mack Supply or visit our store in Mississauga. We carry maple boards, curly maple, ambrosia maple, thick maple boards, dowels, and project-ready maple wood for woodworking, cutting boards, furniture, epoxy projects, and DIY builds.

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