Incised Carving
Incised carving is a surface technique where you cut clean lines or grooves directly into the wood, leaving the background flat. Think of it like engraving in wood: the design is defined by V- or U-shaped cuts rather than raised shapes.
For beginners, incised carving is a friendly way to create crisp lettering, borders, and ornaments with minimal wood removal. You transfer or draw a layout, make controlled stop cuts on the lines, and then deepen each line to a uniform depth. Because the background stays flat, results come fast and clean.
At BeaverCraft, we recommend starting with basswood panels for predictable grain and using a small V-tool for outlines plus a detail knife for sharp corners. Keep your edges stropped—razor-sharp tools glide along the grain and leave polished, consistent grooves that read clearly even at shallow depth.
Whether you’re carving initials on a sign or adding decorative borders to a plaque, a compact set of BeaverCraft V-tools and knives gives you control and repeatability. As confidence grows, you can add textures, crosshatching, or layered line weights for more expressive designs.