Cutting Board Software - Free Download Cutting Board - Top 4 Download - Top4Download.com offers free software downloads for Windows, Mac, iOS and Android computers and mobile devices. Visit for free, full and secured software’s. Cutting Board Design Software. I know you're Mr. Apple so I'm not sure if it can run on your Mac, but I just thought you might be interested in it.
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It seems that at one time or another, all woodworkers try their hands at making an end-grain cutting board. It’s easy to understand why: cutting boards are useful, durable, allow you to really get creative on the design, and are simple to build.Built by Mike D. (RetiredCoastie)on LumberJocks.comBuilt by Jeff (jonasramus) on LumberJocks.comAnd I have never made one. It’s one of those projects that’s been on my to-do list for a long time. As you may know, I love to cook and have been getting by for years with one of those thick plastic ones.
It’s built into my counter and slides out for use. The problem is that it gets mangled pretty quickly and doesn’t clean well.
After a while is begins to take on a permanent onion odor. So I have to replace it every year.Wood cutting boards, on the other hand, will last nearly forever. The end grain of wood is very forgiving on knives and is actually more sanitary to use. The wood tends to heal itself. And if, after a lot of use, it starts to look really ragged and scratched, you can renew it just by resanding the surface.I wasn’t sure what more I had to offer in the way of a video, though. There are lots of cutting board videos. If you decide to make one, you definitely want to check out.
He really takes you through every last detail and consideration. Cutting Board DesignerLast month, Jeremy Greiner sent me a copy of a program he developed called After playing around with it for a while, I discovered how handy it is. It lets you lay out some complex patterns and get a good indication what your board will look like before you cut any wood.
Check it out! Steve to solve the alignment issue you had, I clamped a pair of cauls along the ends of the boards, similar to the ones you added across the top and bottom to keep them flat. In this way, the final glue-up is clamped in 3-d (no glasses required). Also, you shouldn’t really need to sand them after the initial glue up and planing (unless your planer needs new blades?) – in fact I’d say it would risk you getting an uneven surface which would leads to gaps in the glue-up making the glue lines visible.I made a dozen boards two Christmas’s ago, and learned a lot from the first couple I did. The first ones have so much glue squeezed out across the face (flat and smooth under the taped cauls) that I couldn’t mentally handle sanding them – they’re still waiting to be finished one day. Helps to get the right amount of glue figured out, and/or own a drum sander.AnonymousFebruary 10, 2012 @8:47 pm.
BEFORE ASKING A QUESTION, DID YOU READ OUR WIKI? Our includes answers to common questions (e.g. 'How do I start?' ) and links to many valuable resources.It IS under reconstruction right now, so we apologize for broken links, etc.
RULES FOR POSTINGis a forum that encourages the respectful exchange of woodworking knowledge and projects. Before posting, check that your content doesn't violate the rules below. Go to for a detailed explanation of the rules.Project posts are OC (Original Content) only.No blog or video channel spam.No reposts.No viral content.No rehosted/freebooted content.No memes, image macros, reaction gifs/videos, etc.No overt self-promotion.No top-level wood ID, low effort, or price queries.Use a proper descriptive title.Buy some! Download free from theI wanted to let everyone know at that I finished making version 2.0 of my cutting board design software (CBdesigner). I'm not sure if you guys even knew about the previous version that's been on the internet for the past 7 years.The software allows you to easily design your edge-grain and end-grain cutting boards on the computer before cutting one piece of wood.
Let me know what you think!Unfortunately it only works on Windows. There is no installation required. Just unzip all the files and run the executable. It only requires the Microsoft.NET framework and Adobe Reader to run properly. Thanks for a very useful piece of software. I've been using v1.3 on my Gentoo Linux install running under Wine.
I just downloaded and quickly tried 2.0 and it started up. Actually, in the previous version when I printed, I didn't get the end/edge grain pictures, it was just the text, but I'm happy to report that exporting the pictures or printing to the PDF works great. Only weird thing is hitting help crashes the app and after closing preferences window the main GUI is frozen and I have to kill it and relaunch (seems like the prefs dialog is modal but it doesn't recognize when it's closed and keeps the main window greyed out).
I'm not complaining. I'm happy it works under Wine at all. Thank you!.
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