Carving wood that actually works for carving: basswood (European linden) from sustainable European forestry, cleanly cut, evenly grown and splinter-free. You choose between blocks in five quantities (5, 10, 12, 16, 18 pcs) for free projects or pre-shaped blanks for concrete motifs like spoon, kuksa, bird, owl and toucan. Ready to use, shipped from our Swiss warehouse.
The classic carving wood – soft, evenly grown, doesn’t splinter
Blocks for free projects or pre-shaped blanks for a concrete motif
Blocks in 5, 10, 12, 16 or 18 pcs – from try-out to workshop
Square edges, kiln-dried, splinter-free – ready to use without prep
If you’re looking for the wood that works equally well for beginners and professionals, the path almost inevitably leads to basswood (called linden in Europe). Basswood has been the standard wood of woodcarving for centuries – from the South Tyrolean carvers in Gröden to the Nordic Sloyd workshops. Three properties make it the ideal carving wood: First, basswood is soft, you don’t need extreme force, the carving knife glides under control. Second, basswood has a very fine, even fibre structure – it barely splinters and lets you cut cleanly in any direction. Third, the grain is subtle, which makes the finished figure look calmer.
Other woods like beech, oak or birch are technically carvable, but for pure carving with carving knife and hook knife significantly more demanding. Anyone discovering carving for the first time should start with basswood – and even experienced carvers gladly return to linden for fine detail work.
Our range divides into two clear axes, depending on how much prep work you want to take off the wood:
The BeaverCraft basswood blocks come as square-cut pieces in five quantity packs: 5, 10, 12, 16 or 18 blocks per pack. You design the motif yourself – based on a sketch, a carving template or simply freehand. This is the variant for carvers who design their own figures or want to make multiple attempts at one motif. For schools, kids’ birthday parties or carving workshops, the larger packs with 16 or 18 pcs make sense.
Pre-shaped blanks are the counterpart: here the motif is already CNC-pre-shaped, you work out the details and the surface. We carry six blanks: the classic spoon blank, the BB2 spoon set with four blanks for multiple attempts, the kuksa blank for the Nordic drinking cup, the cardinal bird, the owl and the toucan. The advantage: you don’t start with a cuboid, but with a half-finished figure. That makes the result more predictable and is ideal if you want to learn carving without designing your own.
| Product | Wood type | Form | For whom |
|---|---|---|---|
| Basswood blocks 5 pcs | Basswood | Cuboid | Try-out, beginners |
| Basswood blocks 10 pcs | Basswood | Cuboid | Hobby carvers |
| Basswood blocks 12 pcs | Basswood | Cuboid | Small classes, family |
| Basswood blocks 16 pcs | Basswood | Cuboid | Groups, workshops |
| Basswood blocks 18 pcs | Basswood | Cuboid | Schools, carving courses |
| Spoon blank | Basswood | Spoon pre-form | Spoon carvers |
| BB2 Spoon Set (4 blanks) | Basswood | 4× spoon pre-form | Spoon series, practice |
| Kuksa blank | Basswood | Kuksa cup form | Kuksa beginners |
| Cardinal bird blank | Basswood | Bird pre-form | Figure carvers |
| Owl blank | Basswood | Owl pre-form | Gift projects |
| Toucan blank | Basswood | Toucan pre-form | Coloured figure carving |
The internet keeps asking which wood is best for carving. We deliberately stock only basswood, because it’s the right choice for 90% of all carving projects. For context, here’s a comparison:
| Wood type | Hardness | Grain | Carving suitability |
|---|---|---|---|
| Basswood (linden) | Very soft | Very fine, subtle | Ideal – the classic carving wood |
| Birch | Medium soft | Fine | Good, but more direction-dependent |
| Apple | Medium | Fine, dense | Suitable for detail work, harder to cut |
| Beech | Hard | Medium | Splinters more easily, tough for beginners |
| Oak | Very hard | Strongly visible | Furniture making rather than carving |
| Walnut | Hard | Beautiful grain | For experienced carvers with sharp blades |
| Pear | Medium-hard | Very fine | Excellent for fine detail carving |
If you need a different wood type for a specific project later (e.g. walnut for food-contact drinking vessels or birch for a traditional sauna ladle), you’ll find these woods exclusively in our complete sets at Carving Kits – the matching wood is included per project.
A question we often hear on the phone. A rough rule of thumb:
A 5×5×15 cm block is enough for a small animal figure or a compact spoon. For larger projects, it’s often more practical to glue two blocks together rather than ordering a huge cuboid – the wood works more evenly that way.
The classic entry to spoon carving: basswood, roughly 18×5×3 cm, with hinted bowl and handle shape. The BB2 set contains four identical blanks – perfect for practice (you inevitably make mistakes on your first attempt, fewer on the second, and by the fourth you’ve got the hang of it) or for a whole collection. You need: a straight carving knife plus a hook knife for hollowing the bowl.
The Nordic drinking cup as a basswood pre-form. The kuksa blank has the body and the loop handle already milled out – you work out the bowl, refine the outer edges and finalise the handle. Important for food contact: after carving, rub with linseed or walnut oil. Then linden is suitable for cold drinks.
Three pre-shaped bird motifs in increasing complexity:
BeaverCraft basswood is kiln-dried and ideally processed straight away. If you’re stockpiling:
Basswood is so soft that it works with almost any sharp blade. For an optimal result we recommend:
If you’ve never carved and just want to start, a complete carving kit is often the more efficient choice than buying wood and tools separately. The kit bundles a matching wood blank, the right carving knife and an illustrated guide. Only once you know what you like does it make sense to buy individual carving wood and tools. Blocks from this filter category are then the next step – when you want to realise your own motifs.
We’re an official Swiss dealer for BeaverCraft and stock the entire carving wood range from our warehouse in Menzingen ZG. No waiting time, no customs, no surprises on shipping.
Direct brand filter: BeaverCraft Carving Tools. Main category: Carving Tools & Knives.
Basswood (linden). Three properties make it the carving wood par excellence: it’s soft (you don’t need extreme force), the fibre structure is very fine and even (it barely splinters), and the grain is subtle (the finished figure looks calm). Other woods like birch, apple or pear are also carvable, while beech and oak are too hard for pure carving with a carving knife and splinter more easily. Anyone learning to carve should start with basswood without exception.
Blocks are square-cut cuboids – you design the motif yourself, from sketch to finished cut. Pre-shaped blanks, on the other hand, are already CNC-pre-formed: the basic motif (spoon, kuksa, bird, owl, toucan) is already recognisable, you only work out details and surface. Blocks give freedom, blanks give certainty. Beginners reach success faster with blanks, experienced carvers prefer the freedom of blocks.
It depends on how many attempts you plan. Rule of thumb: For the first carving attempt, a 5- or 10-pack is enough – you typically make 1–2 discarded attempts per finished figure. For multiple weekend projects or as a gift add-on, a 10- or 12-pack fits. For schools, carving courses or camp workshops, 16 or 18 blocks per pack are the most efficient choice. Generally, slightly more wood in stock is better – every additional block means another attempt and more routine.
The BeaverCraft basswood blocks come in different standard sizes. Exact dimensions per pack are on each product page. A typical carving figure (e.g. a small bird or animal figure) needs a block of around 5×5×15 cm. For larger workpieces, it’s often more sensible to glue two blocks together than to order a huge cuboid – glued basswood works more evenly.
Yes, with one condition: after carving, the spoon must be oiled with linseed oil or food-safe walnut oil. Basswood itself isn’t toxic and tolerates food contact – the oil seals the surface, protects against moisture absorption and makes the spoon dishwasher-safe. Important: linden is softer than olive wood or walnut, which is why classic cooking spoons are often walnut or olive. For cold dishes, kuksa drinking vessels and cream spoons, however, linden is excellent.
Practically any sharp carving knife. Basswood is so soft that it doesn’t need special tools. For a good result we recommend: a straight carving knife (BeaverCraft C2 or C4m, Mora 106C/120C) for outer shapes, a hook knife (BeaverCraft SK1, Mora 162) for bowls in spoons and kuksa, and optionally a detail knife (BeaverCraft C7) for fine contours. Complete overview in the filter category Carving Knives.
We deliberately stock only basswood, because it’s the right choice for 90% of all carving projects. Other woods with special properties (walnut for food-contact drinking vessels, birch for sauna ladles) are available specifically in our complete carving kits – the matching wood is included per project. For free carving, basswood is practically always the best choice.
From us: Swiss-Sale.ch is an official Swiss dealer for BeaverCraft carving wood and ships from our warehouse in Menzingen ZG. Dispatch within 1–2 business days, free shipping over CHF 100, no customs and no waiting time on EU deliveries. In Swiss DIY stores you occasionally find basswood, but mostly only large planks for carpentry – no prepared carving wood and no pre-shaped blanks.
Yes, basswood is the ideal carving wood for children, because the blade glides under control through the soft wood and kids need less force. Important: from age eight with a safety-cap carving knife (e.g. BeaverCraft Kids set) and always under adult supervision. Cut-resistant gloves (e.g. Nitras Taeki 6730) on the holding hand are mandatory. For carving courses with larger groups, the 16- or 18-pack quantities make sense.
Dry at normal room humidity (40–60%), not in the basement (too damp) and not in direct sun (too dry, can cause cracks). Basswood is delivered kiln-dried – that’s the ideal condition. If you bring wood from a cold storage, let it rest a day in the work room to acclimatise. Wood blocks last for years without quality loss when stored properly.
A carving blank is a pre-shaped wooden body without tools and without instructions – you only get the wood with a milled rough form. A complete carving kit (see Carving Kits) additionally includes the matching carving knife and an illustrated guide. If you already own tools and just need the motif wood, blanks are the more efficient choice. If you’re discovering carving, a complete kit makes more sense.
Practically not. That’s one of the main reasons linden is the classic carving wood. Basswood has a very fine, even fibre structure without pronounced annual ring contrasts – that means the blade cuts cleanly through the fibres rather than tearing them. Prerequisite: a sharp blade. Any wood can splinter with dull tools. For sharpness care, see Abrasives.
Yes, basswood absorbs stains, dyes and acrylic paints very well. Important: before staining or painting, smooth the finished carved piece with fine sandpaper (grit 240–400) and remove wood fibres. Then apply a coat of paint or stain and optionally seal with clear varnish or oil after drying. For spoons and kuksa that come into contact with food, use food-safe oil instead of stain.
Yes. All carving woods and blanks are stocked at our warehouse in Menzingen ZG and ship within 1–2 business days. Shipping within Switzerland is free over CHF 100. No customs, no EU waiting time. Reach us by phone at +41 41 755 34 33 or by email at info@swiss-sale.ch. In our Menzingen showroom you can examine the range in person.
Blocks for free projects or pre-shaped blanks for concrete motifs. Advice on +41 41 755 34 33 or info@swiss-sale.ch.
| id | title | price | manufacturer |
|
from *
/ |

