What Size Mold Do I Need for an Epoxy Serving Board?
The right epoxy mold size depends on the finished board you want to make, the wood pieces you are using, and how much resin you want to show in the final design. A small charcuterie board, a larger serving board, a round tray, and a river-style board may all need different mold sizes.
This guide will help you choose a mold size for epoxy serving boards, charcuterie boards, resin trays, small river boards, and wood and epoxy projects.
Quick Answer: Common Epoxy Mold Sizes
For most small to medium wood and epoxy board projects, a reusable HDPE mold between 10" x 18" and 12" x 24" is a good starting point. Larger molds are better for statement boards, trays, wall art, and bigger resin projects.
| Mold Size | Best For | Project Style | Shop |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10" x 18" | Small epoxy serving boards, compact charcuterie boards, gift boards | Great for smaller one-of-a-kind wood pieces and controlled resin layouts | Shop 10" x 18" Mold |
| 12" x 24" | Larger serving boards, resin trays, river-style boards, bigger charcuterie boards | More room for wood placement, epoxy flow, and creative layouts | Shop 12" x 24" Mold |
| 18" x 36" | Large serving boards, statement pours, oversized trays, wall art | Better for larger wood pieces or projects with more epoxy space | Shop 18" x 36" Mold |
| Round Molds | Round boards, trays, decorative resin pours, wall art, table-style projects | Useful when you want a circular finished shape instead of a rectangular board | Shop Round Molds |
The Main Rule: Match the Mold to the Finished Project
Do not choose a mold only because it is the biggest option. A larger mold gives you more room, but it also usually requires more epoxy, more sanding, and more planning. A smaller mold can be easier to manage and may be better for gift boards, serving boards, and beginner-friendly epoxy projects.
Start with the finished piece you want to make, then choose the mold size that gives you enough room for the wood, resin, and layout.
How Much Space Should You Leave for Epoxy?
There is no single perfect ratio, but the wood and epoxy should feel balanced. If the wood fills almost the entire mold, the epoxy may look like a small filler strip instead of a design feature. If the wood is too small, the project may feel more like a resin casting with a small piece of wood inside.
Mostly Wood
Best when the wood has beautiful grain and you only want epoxy to fill cracks, voids, or a small edge area.
Choosing One-of-a-Kind PiecesBalanced Wood & Epoxy
Best for charcuterie boards, serving boards, and river-style pieces where both the wood and resin are important design features.
How to Choose Wood for EpoxyMostly Epoxy
Best for artistic resin pieces, wall art, colour-focused pours, or projects where pigment movement is the main feature.
Shop PigmentsChoosing a 10" x 18" Mold
A 10" x 18" mold is a strong choice for smaller epoxy charcuterie boards, compact serving boards, gift boards, and beginner-friendly wood and resin projects. It is large enough to create a usable finished board, but small enough to keep the pour manageable.
This size works especially well when you are using smaller one-of-a-kind wood pieces that have interesting grain, cracks, voids, or live edge character.
Choosing a 12" x 24" Mold
A 12" x 24" mold gives you more layout room than a smaller mold. This can be helpful for larger serving boards, resin trays, bigger charcuterie boards, and projects where you want more epoxy flow around the wood.
This size is a good option if you want a finished board that feels more substantial or if you want more room to position multiple wood pieces inside the mold.
Choosing an 18" x 36" Mold
An 18" x 36" mold is better for larger projects, oversized serving boards, statement trays, wall art, or resin projects that need more layout space. This size can give you more design flexibility, but it also requires more planning, more epoxy, and more sanding after the pour.
Before choosing a larger mold, make sure you have the right amount of epoxy, a stable work surface, sanding supplies, and a clear layout plan.
Choosing a Round Mold
Round molds are useful when you want a circular serving board, tray, wall art piece, table-style pour, or decorative resin project. They create a different design challenge because the wood layout needs to work within a circle instead of a rectangle.
Round molds can work well with curved live edge pieces, smaller offcuts, burl pieces, or highly figured wood that you want to feature in a more decorative layout.
Do Not Forget the Finished Size
The mold size is not always the exact finished board size. After the epoxy cures, you may need to trim, flatten, sand, round over edges, or clean up the final shape. Leave enough room in your plan for these finishing steps.
If the finished board needs to be a very specific size, plan your mold, wood layout, epoxy pour, and trimming steps before you start.
Match the Wood Piece to the Mold
When choosing wood for an epoxy mold, look at the actual shape of the piece. A piece that technically fits inside the mold may still create an awkward layout if the live edge, grain direction, or void placement does not work with the finished board shape.
| Wood Feature | Why It Matters in the Mold | What to Look For |
|---|---|---|
| Length | Affects how the board fills the mold and how much trimming may be needed. | Choose a piece that fits comfortably without forcing the layout. |
| Width | Controls how much room is left for epoxy on the sides or centre. | Leave enough space for resin to become part of the design. |
| Live Edge Shape | Creates natural movement where wood meets epoxy. | Look for curves or edges that create an interesting resin area. |
| Cracks & Voids | Can be filled with epoxy and become design details. | Choose pieces with natural features you want to highlight. |
| Grain Direction | Influences the visual flow of the finished board. | Consider whether the grain should run lengthwise, diagonally, or across the board. |
| Thickness | Affects final board thickness after flattening and sanding. | Make sure the piece has enough material for your finished project. |
For a deeper breakdown, read How to Choose Wood Pieces for Epoxy Projects.
Recommended Supplies for Mold Setup
Choosing the mold is only one part of the project. You may also need epoxy, pigments, mold accessories, sanding supplies, and finishing products depending on the final board you want to make.
HDPE Epoxy Molds
Reusable HDPE molds are useful for epoxy serving boards, charcuterie boards, trays, resin art, and casting projects.
Shop HDPE Epoxy MoldsMold Accessories
Clamping blocks, dividers, and mold accessories can help with layout, setup, and project control.
Shop Clamping Blocks & DividersAkfix Silicone / Mold Sealant
Sealant can be useful for mold setup depending on the form, layout, and project style.
Shop Epoxy AccessoriesEcoPoxy FlowCast
Use deep pour epoxy for casting, filling deeper voids, and creating thicker resin sections in wood and epoxy projects.
Shop EcoPoxy FlowCastBeaver Dust Pigments
Add colour, shimmer, metallic effects, pearl effects, neon-style colour, or colour-shift effects to your resin pour.
Shop Beaver Dust PigmentsSanding Supplies
After curing, sanding helps bring the wood and epoxy to a smooth, level finished surface.
Shop Sanding SuppliesBeginner-Friendly Mold Size Recommendation
For many first-time epoxy serving board projects, a 10" x 18" or 12" x 24" mold is usually easier to manage than a larger mold. These sizes are large enough to make a useful board but small enough to keep the layout, epoxy quantity, sanding, and finishing process more manageable.
If you are new to epoxy, start with a smaller one-of-a-kind wood piece, a manageable mold size, and a simple pigment plan before moving into larger pours.
Common Mold Size Mistakes
| Mistake | Why It Causes Problems | Better Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Choosing the largest mold first | Larger molds require more epoxy, more sanding, more workspace, and more layout planning. | Start with the finished project size, then choose the mold. |
| Not leaving room for epoxy | If the wood fills too much of the mold, the resin may not become a visible design feature. | Leave intentional space for epoxy around the wood or through the centre. |
| Using wood that is too small | The finished project may feel more like a resin block than a wood and epoxy board. | Choose wood that creates a balanced wood-to-resin layout. |
| Forgetting about trimming | The finished piece may need to be cut, cleaned up, or shaped after curing. | Plan for final trimming, sanding, and edge work. |
| Ignoring thickness | The wood and epoxy need enough thickness for surfacing and sanding. | Choose a wood piece and mold setup that allows for the finished thickness you want. |
Where One-of-a-Kind Wood Pieces Help
When the wood is individually photographed, it becomes easier to choose a piece that fits a specific mold. You can look at the exact shape, grain direction, live edge, cracks, voids, and overall size before deciding whether it will work for your epoxy project.
This is much better than guessing from a generic stock image, especially when the layout of the wood and resin is a big part of the finished design.
Helpful Guides to Read Next
Choose Your Mold, Then Choose Your Wood
Start with the finished project size, choose the right reusable HDPE mold, then browse individually photographed wood pieces that fit your layout, grain, epoxy colour, and finished design.