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Wood shapes and cutouts for makers who want fast-to-finish blanks for painting, decorating, and batch crafting.

Shop classic everyday shapes plus seasonal designs—then click into the exact size and pack options that fit your project.

Bulk wood cutouts for Pro-Makers

When you’re building kits, stocking a shop, or prepping for seasonal launches, the goal is simple: find the right shape quickly and confirm specs at a glance.

Use this collection to choose a silhouette first, then verify size, quantity, and any compatibility notes on the product page before adding multiples.

  • Material/finish: Unfinished wood cutouts (ready to decorate).
  • Styles in this collection: Hearts, stars, holiday shapes, geometric shapes, and animal/themed designs.
  • Size + quantity: Varies by item—see selectable options and the product page details for exact dimensions and pack count.
  • Common decorating methods: Paint, stain, markers, and glue (test first for your specific process).

Which shapes are best for signs, tiered trays, and photo-ready decor?

Pick bold, readable silhouettes first (circles, stars, hearts) so your finished piece looks clean from a distance and in product photos. For repeatable designs, click into one item and lock your exact size/pack option, then add quantity for batching. Start with a 10-inch wood circle cutout for bases or a 1-inch star wood cutout for accents.

How do I build a cohesive set across multiple shapes?

Choose one “hero” shape and keep everything else consistent with it: similar outline style (simple vs. detailed), similar scale, and one finish plan (paint-only, stain-only, or mixed media). If you want maximum variety without overthinking it, browse wooden shapes for crafts and standardize your sizing rules as you go.

What’s the fastest path for seasonal and classroom themes?

Use a small core assortment you can reorder and decorate in batches, then add a few theme-specific shapes to make the set feel new. That approach saves time because your process stays consistent while your designs rotate. For holiday-only options, jump to wooden holiday cutouts.

Reduce rework before you buy

Before you add bulk quantities, confirm the exact dimensions, thickness (if listed), and pack count on the product page—especially if you’re fitting blanks into frames, trays, tags, or packaging.

If you’re trying a new paint, stain, topcoat, or adhesive, order a small test quantity first so you can validate coverage and dry time on your real workflow.

FAQ

How do I choose the right size for my project?

Measure the finished space first (sign, tray, frame, ornament area), then select the largest shape that leaves room for paint edges, bow/string holes (if applicable), and any added lettering. If you’re selling sets, pick one standard size so photos, packaging, and restocks stay consistent. Always verify the exact dimensions on the product page before ordering multiples.

Do I need to sand these before painting?

These are unfinished wood cutouts intended for decorating, so many makers go straight to priming and paint to move fast. Sanding needs depend on the finish you want (rustic vs. crisp) and the paint type you use. If you want the smoothest finish, do a quick scuff sand, wipe clean, then spot-sand between coats as needed.

Can I buy in bulk for kits, events, or production runs?

Yes—this collection supports both single-project shopping and volume buying. The safest bulk workflow is: choose one item, confirm the exact size/pack option, then scale quantity based on your expected yield (including a few extras for tests and rejects). If you’re building multi-shape kits, standardize one finish plan so your production stays predictable.

How do I make sure multiple shapes look like they “match” in a set?

Match on three things: outline style (simple with simple), scale (avoid mixing tiny detailed pieces with large bold pieces), and a consistent finish approach (same palette and topcoat). When you’re assembling a kit, add items to cart only after verifying each product’s selectable options so you don’t accidentally mix sizes or pack configurations.

What’s the quickest way to find what I need without endless scrolling?

Decide the occasion first (everyday basics vs. seasonal), then decide the role (base shape, accent, or focal piece). For product lines, start with foundational shapes you’ll reuse across designs, then add themed shapes as seasonal add-ons. Use product pages to confirm size and pack details before committing to bulk quantities.