Leopardwood Guide: Uses, Colour, Grain, Janka Hardness, Finishing & Project Ideas
Leopardwood is a bold exotic hardwood known for its reddish-brown colour, dramatic flecked figure, high hardness, and distinctive leopard-like grain pattern. It is popular for cutting boards, charcuterie boards, serving boards, furniture accents, drawer fronts, boxes, signs, inlays, epoxy projects, and decorative woodworking where the grain is meant to be the main feature.
This guide explains what Leopardwood is, why it has its spotted figure, how hard it is, how it works, how to finish it, what projects it is best for, and how to choose the right Leopardwood boards for your next build.
Add a high-quality Leopardwood image here. Ideal image: close-up of Leopardwood flecking, finished Leopardwood board, Leopardwood cutting board accent, or Leopardwood boards from Jeff Mack Supply.
Suggested alt text: Leopardwood grain close up showing reddish brown colour with large leopard-like flecks.
What Is Leopardwood?
Leopardwood is an exotic hardwood from Central and South America, commonly associated with the species Roupala montana. It is best known for its large medullary rays, which create the spotted, flecked, leopard-like pattern that gives the wood its name.
Leopardwood is usually medium to dark reddish brown with light brown, grey, or golden flecks. The figure is strongest when the wood is quartersawn because the wide rays are exposed more clearly on the face of the board.
Leopardwood Quick Specs
| Property | Leopardwood Details |
|---|---|
| Common Names | Leopardwood |
| Scientific Name | Roupala montana, also listed as Roupala brasiliense |
| Wood Type | Exotic hardwood |
| Typical Colour | Medium to dark reddish brown with light brown, grey, or golden flecks and rays |
| Grain | Usually straight, with dramatic ray fleck figure, especially in quartersawn boards |
| Texture | Fairly coarse texture with strong visual figure |
| Janka Hardness | Approximately 2,150 lbf |
| Average Dried Weight | Approximately 55 lbs/ft³ |
| Workability | Dense and hard; machines well with sharp tools, but requires careful sanding and finishing |
| Best Uses | Cutting board accents, charcuterie boards, serving boards, furniture accents, drawer fronts, boxes, signs, inlays, epoxy projects, and decorative woodworking |
| Beginner Friendly? | Good for careful beginners on small projects, but it is harder and denser than many domestic woods |
| Outdoor Use? | Most Jeff Mack Supply project uses are indoor boards, accents, furniture details, and decorative pieces |
| Best Finish | Clear oil, hardwax oil, water-based finish, lacquer, or food-safe board oil depending on the project |
Why Does Leopardwood Have Spots?
Leopardwood’s spotted look comes from its large medullary rays. When the wood is cut in the right orientation, those rays show up as wide flecks across the surface. This creates the distinctive leopard-like figure that makes the wood so recognizable.
The amount of figure can vary from board to board. Some pieces show large, bold flecks across the full face, while others show a more subtle pattern. If you want the most dramatic look, choose boards with strong visible flecking and lay out the project before cutting.
Leopardwood vs Lacewood
Leopardwood and Lacewood are sometimes confused because both can show a spotted or flecked pattern. In many lumber markets, the names are not always used consistently. For this guide, Leopardwood refers to the denser, harder Roupala species commonly sold as Leopardwood.
The practical takeaway is simple: buy based on the actual board in front of you. Look at the colour, fleck size, grain pattern, density, and intended project use instead of relying only on the name.
What Is Leopardwood Best Used For?
Leopardwood is best used in projects where the flecked figure becomes part of the design. It is hard, dense, and visually busy, so many woodworkers use it as an accent or feature wood rather than the only wood in a large project.
| Project Type | Is Leopardwood a Good Choice? | Why It Works |
|---|---|---|
| Cutting Boards | Excellent as an accent | Leopardwood adds a dramatic flecked pattern and pairs well with maple, walnut, cherry, Purpleheart, Padauk, Wenge, and other hardwoods. |
| Charcuterie Boards | Excellent | The natural figure makes serving boards look unique without needing stain or added colour. |
| Serving Boards | Excellent | Leopardwood’s figure creates a premium look for gift boards, decorative boards, and one-of-a-kind pieces. |
| Furniture Accents | Very Good | Leopardwood works well for drawer fronts, handles, panels, trim, inlays, and feature details. |
| Boxes and Small Projects | Excellent | Small projects are a great way to show off the flecked grain without making the design too busy. |
| Inlays and Contrast Details | Very Good | The pattern creates visual interest beside both light and dark woods. |
| Epoxy Projects | Very Good | Leopardwood pairs well with clear, black, white, gold, bronze, pearl, smoky grey, blue, and metallic resin colours. |
| Large Furniture Builds | Possible, but visually bold | Leopardwood can dominate a design, so it is often best used as a feature panel, accent, or smaller visible part. |
Leopardwood Colour, Grain & Appearance
Leopardwood usually has a medium to dark reddish-brown base colour with lighter brown, grey, golden, or tan flecks. The flecks can appear like spots, scales, lace, or rays depending on how the board is cut.
The grain is usually straight, and the texture is fairly coarse. The figure is the main visual feature. In the right project, Leopardwood can look rich, exotic, bold, and highly decorative.
Leopardwood pairs well with maple, walnut, cherry, white oak, Wenge, Padauk, Purpleheart, Zebrawood, Black Limba, clear epoxy, black epoxy, gold pigments, bronze pigments, pearl pigments, and smoky grey resin.
Is Leopardwood a Hardwood?
Yes. Leopardwood is a hardwood, and it is much harder than many common domestic woodworking species. With a Janka hardness of approximately 2,150 lbf, Leopardwood is harder than walnut, cherry, white oak, hard maple, ash, Red Oak, Padauk, Zebrawood, and Wenge.
That hardness makes Leopardwood durable, but it also means sharp tools and careful machining are important. It is a good wood for accents, serving boards, boxes, furniture details, and decorative projects where hardness and figure both matter.
Is Leopardwood Easy to Work With?
Leopardwood is workable, but it is harder and denser than many domestic hardwoods. It requires sharp blades, sharp router bits, clean sanding, and good dust control. Like many dense exotic woods, it rewards patience and careful setup.
| Process | Leopardwood Performance | Shop Tip |
|---|---|---|
| Sawing | Cuts well with sharp blades, but it is dense | Use a sharp blade and avoid forcing the cut. |
| Planing | Usually planes well if grain is cooperative | Take light passes and watch for grain direction changes. |
| Routing | Routes cleanly with sharp bits | Use multiple shallow passes to reduce burning, tearout, and edge chipping. |
| Sanding | Sands well, but density takes patience | Do not skip grits. Sand evenly so the flecked figure looks clean under finish. |
| Drilling | Drills well with sharp bits | Clear chips often and avoid overheating the bit. |
| Gluing | Glues well when surfaces are freshly prepared | Remove dust and use clean, flat, freshly machined glue surfaces. |
| Finishing | Finishes beautifully | Test your finish first because oils and clear finishes can deepen the reddish-brown colour and make the flecks stand out. |
Best Finish for Leopardwood
Leopardwood usually looks best with a clear or lightly warming finish that highlights the reddish-brown colour and dramatic flecking. Heavy stain is usually unnecessary because the wood already has strong natural figure.
For cutting boards, charcuterie boards, and serving boards, use a food-safe board oil or wax. For furniture accents, boxes, drawer fronts, panels, and decorative pieces, hardwax oil, clear oil, lacquer, water-based finish, or a durable clear topcoat can all work.
| Project | Recommended Finish Type | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Cutting Boards | Food-safe cutting board oil and wax | Easy to maintain and refresh over time. |
| Charcuterie Boards | Food-safe board oil or wax | Enhances the reddish-brown colour and flecked figure while keeping the board suitable for serving use. |
| Furniture Accents | Hardwax oil, clear oil, lacquer, or durable clear finish | Protects the surface while letting the Leopardwood figure stay visible. |
| Boxes and Decorative Projects | Clear finish, hardwax oil, lacquer, shellac, or water-based finish | Small projects are a great way to show off the spotted figure. |
| Drawer Fronts and Panels | Hardwax oil, clear coat, lacquer, or water-based finish | Lets the figure become the main visual feature. |
| Epoxy Projects | Hardwax oil, clear oil, or polished epoxy system | The best choice depends on whether the surface is mostly wood, mostly epoxy, or both. |
Recommended Leopardwood Finishing Supplies
Is Leopardwood Good for Cutting Boards?
Leopardwood can be excellent for cutting boards, especially as an accent strip or feature wood. It is hard, durable, and visually unique. It pairs well with maple, walnut, cherry, Purpleheart, Padauk, Wenge, Zebrawood, and other hardwoods.
For cutting boards, choose properly dried, stable boards, avoid defects, sand thoroughly, and finish with a food-safe board oil or wax. Because Leopardwood has bold figure, many makers use it strategically as part of a layout rather than the entire cutting board.
Is Leopardwood Good for Charcuterie Boards?
Yes. Leopardwood is excellent for charcuterie boards and serving boards because the flecked figure makes each board look unique without adding stain. It works especially well for gift boards, decorative serving boards, and mixed-species layouts.
A clear food-safe oil or wax finish will usually make the reddish-brown colour richer and the flecking more visible.
Is Leopardwood Good for Epoxy Projects?
Leopardwood is very good for epoxy projects when you want a natural wood pattern that already has movement and contrast. It pairs well with clear, black, white, gold, bronze, pearl, smoky grey, blue, green, and metallic epoxy colours.
Leopardwood works well for epoxy serving boards, small river boards, decorative strips, signs, trays, wall art, and accent details. Before pouring epoxy, make sure the wood is dry, clean, sanded, and free of dust, loose fibres, and unstable material.
Helpful Epoxy Links
What Leopardwood Should I Buy?
The best Leopardwood product depends on your project. Use project-ready boards for cutting boards, charcuterie boards, serving boards, boxes, signs, accent strips, inlays, and furniture details. If the figure matters most, choose pieces with the strongest flecking on the face of the board.
| Project Goal | Best Leopardwood Option | Recommended Link |
|---|---|---|
| Cutting boards, charcuterie boards, serving boards, signs, boxes, trays, and accent strips | Project-ready Leopardwood boards | Shop Leopardwood Select a Size |
| Furniture accents, drawer fronts, handles, panels, and decorative details | Leopardwood boards selected for strong visible flecking | Shop All Leopardwood |
| Mixed-species cutting board layouts | Leopardwood paired with maple, walnut, cherry, Padauk, Purpleheart, or Wenge | Shop Dimensional Lumber |
| Projects where you need easier machining | Consider walnut, cherry, maple, or white oak instead | View the Wood Species Guide |
| Unsure what size you need | Start with board foot calculations and project layout | Read the Board Foot Guide |
Shop Leopardwood for Your Next Project
Jeff Mack Supply carries Leopardwood boards for cutting boards, charcuterie boards, furniture accents, epoxy projects, signs, boxes, inlays, drawer fronts, handles, and decorative woodworking. Order online or visit us in-store in Mississauga.
Leopardwood vs Other Woods
Leopardwood is often compared to Zebrawood, Wenge, Padauk, Purpleheart, Maple, Walnut, and Black Limba. It is usually chosen when you want a hard exotic wood with natural flecking and a spotted figure.
| Comparison | Main Difference | Best Choice If... |
|---|---|---|
| Leopardwood vs Zebrawood | Leopardwood has spotted ray flecks. Zebrawood has bold linear stripes. | Choose Leopardwood for a spotted figure. Choose Zebrawood for strong stripe patterns. |
| Leopardwood vs Wenge | Leopardwood is reddish brown with flecks. Wenge is dark brown to nearly black with coarse linear grain. | Choose Leopardwood for figure and warmth. Choose Wenge for dark modern contrast. |
| Leopardwood vs Padauk | Leopardwood is flecked reddish brown. Padauk is brighter orange-red. | Choose Leopardwood for spotted grain. Choose Padauk for bright colour contrast. |
| Leopardwood vs Purpleheart | Leopardwood has natural flecking. Purpleheart is naturally purple and even more colour-forward. | Choose Leopardwood for texture and figure. Choose Purpleheart for bold purple accents. |
| Leopardwood vs Walnut | Leopardwood is harder, denser, and more figured. Walnut is darker brown, smoother-looking, and easier to work. | Choose Leopardwood for small decorative accents. Choose walnut for dark premium furniture and easier machining. |
Common Mistakes When Working With Leopardwood
Ignoring Board Orientation
The flecked figure depends on how the board is cut. Lay out the project so the best figure lands where it will be most visible.
Confusing Leopardwood and Lacewood
The names are sometimes used loosely. Buy based on the actual board, figure, colour, density, and intended project use.
Using Dull Tools
Leopardwood is hard and dense. Sharp blades and bits reduce burning, tearout, and rough edges.
Skipping a Finish Test
Clear finishes and oils can make the reddish-brown colour richer and the flecks more dramatic. Always test on an offcut first.
Overusing It in a Design
Leopardwood is visually busy. It often works best as an accent, feature strip, box lid, drawer front, or decorative detail.
Rushing Sanding
The figure looks best when the surface is sanded evenly. Do not skip grits, and inspect scratches before finishing.
Leopardwood FAQs
Is Leopardwood real wood?
Yes. Leopardwood is a real exotic hardwood known for its reddish-brown colour and dramatic leopard-like flecked figure.
What colour is Leopardwood?
Leopardwood is usually medium to dark reddish brown with lighter brown, grey, tan, or golden flecks and rays.
Why does Leopardwood have spots?
The spotted look comes from large medullary rays that show as flecks on the face of the board, especially when the wood is quartersawn.
Is Leopardwood hard?
Yes. Leopardwood is hard and dense, with a Janka hardness of approximately 2,150 lbf.
Is Leopardwood harder than maple?
Yes. Leopardwood is harder than hard maple. Leopardwood is approximately 2,150 lbf, while hard maple is approximately 1,450 lbf.
Is Leopardwood harder than walnut?
Yes. Leopardwood is much harder than black walnut. Leopardwood is approximately 2,150 lbf, while black walnut is approximately 1,010 lbf.
Is Leopardwood good for cutting boards?
Yes. Leopardwood can be excellent for cutting boards, especially as an accent strip or feature wood. It is hard, durable, and visually unique.
Is Leopardwood good for charcuterie boards?
Yes. Leopardwood is excellent for charcuterie boards and serving boards because the flecked grain gives each board a unique, premium look.
Is Leopardwood good for epoxy projects?
Yes. Leopardwood is very good for epoxy projects because its reddish-brown colour and spotted figure pair well with clear, black, white, gold, bronze, pearl, smoky grey, blue, green, and metallic resin colours.
Where can I buy Leopardwood in Canada?
You can shop Leopardwood online at Jeff Mack Supply or visit our store in Mississauga. We carry Leopardwood boards for cutting boards, charcuterie boards, furniture accents, epoxy projects, signs, boxes, inlays, drawer fronts, handles, and decorative woodworking.