Call Me

Wood Panel For Painting - Custom Size


Custom sized cradled wood panels for painting. These wood art boards are available in any thickness or depth. Come with hanging D-rings, raw unfinished wood panel or optional white gesso double primed, ready to paint on. Heavy duty frame made from hardwood are used to build these wood canvas board and deep art cradle boards. Our high-quality Baltic birch plywood surface allow artists to use any artistic medium including oil paint, acrylic paint, encaustic paint and mixed media 3D collage with glass, metal, fabric, epoxy, and more.

  • Custom Thickness For Wood Box
  • Custom Size Wood Panel For Painting
  • Custom Size Art Shipping Box
  • Un-Finished Wood Panel For Painting

Top 5 Mistakes When Painting on Custom Wood Panels #canvaslot #customwoodpanels #artistwooodpanel   Watch video...

Why Use Wood Panels for Painting? #canvaslot #artistwoodpanel #customwoodpanel   Watch video...

View more videos for wood panel for painting, cradled artist panel for painting, extra large wood art board for painting, unfinished artist wood panel, deep birch wood painting panel, raw painting panel, custom size painting panels, wood art board, custom artist wood panel, custom sized wood panel, custom wood panel, painting wood panel, and more.

Latest Blog Posts

How to Beat Declining Foot Traffic in Art Galleries

If you run or contribute to a gallery, you’ve probably noticed that fewer people are walking through the door these days. Big institutions like the Tate galleries in the UK are still struggling to attract pre-COVID visitor levels, with millions fewer people showing up in recent years. That trend isn’t unique to museums, smaller, independent […]

The 80/20 Rule in Painting: How Artists Can Get Better Results with Less Effort

Many painters spend hours polishing details that viewers barely notice. Meanwhile, the things that actually make the painting work often get less attention. This is where the 80/20 rule becomes useful. The idea comes from the Pareto Principle. It suggests that roughly 80 percent of results come from 20 percent of the effort. In painting, […]


back to top