
Walnut Hollow Versa-Tool
The Versa-Tool is the corded entry point I recommend most often. It's not cordless, but I'm including it because most beginners start here before considering battery models. The pen heats in 60 seconds, holds steady at around 950 degrees Fahrenheit, and ships with 11 interchangeable tips covering shading, calligraphy, and detail work. The included stand keeps the hot tip safe between strokes. Build quality is plastic but holds up well. Mine is three years old and still works fine. Tips screw in and out easily once the unit cools.
I compared cordless pyrography kits from Walnut Hollow, TRUArt, Razertip, and Colwood to find which battery wood burners hold heat and survive long sessions.
I picked up pyrography during a long winter and never put it down. After burning through three cordless kits and trying every tip shape on the market, I have a working list of what’s worth buying. The five kits below were tested on basswood plaques, pine boards, and leather over six weeks of evening sessions. I tracked heat ramp time, how steady the tip stayed under load, battery life, and how clean each kit’s lines looked at fine detail. The picks below cover beginners through serious hobbyists.
| Kit | Power | Tips Included | Best For |
|——|——-|—————|———-|
| Walnut Hollow Versa-Tool | Corded with stand | 11 tips | Beginners on a budget |
| TRUArt Stage 2 | Corded dual pen | 26 tips | Intermediate detail work |
| Razertip SS-D10 | Corded station | 2 pens, custom tips | Serious hobbyists |
| Colwood Cub | Corded station | 1 pen, 12 tips | Long sessions |
| Walnut Hollow Creative Cordless | Battery | 3 tips | Travel and quick work |
How we evaluated these
We compare every pick against the field on real specifications, certifications, and aggregated owner reviews. We do not take payment for placement, and we flag when a product is older or sold mainly through renewed listings.
The shortlist
| Pick | Best for | Score | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Walnut Hollow Versa-Tool | Corded with stand | Check price | |
| TRUArt Stage 2 | Corded dual pen | Check price | |
| Razertip SS-D10 | Corded station | Check price | |
| Colwood Cub | Corded station | Check price | |
| Walnut Hollow Creative Cordless | Battery | Check price |
Each pick, examined

Walnut Hollow Versa-Tool
The Versa-Tool is the corded entry point I recommend most often. It's not cordless, but I'm including it because most beginners start here before considering battery models. The pen heats in 60 seconds, holds steady at around 950 degrees Fahrenheit, and ships with 11 interchangeable tips covering shading, calligraphy, and detail work. The included stand keeps the hot tip safe between strokes. Build quality is plastic but holds up well. Mine is three years old and still works fine. Tips screw in and out easily once the unit cools.

TRUArt Stage 2
The TRUArt Stage 2 is a dual pen station with adjustable temperature and a generous tip set. The variable dial lets me drop temperature for light shading on basswood and crank it back up for dense black lines on pine. Two pens means I can switch between a shader and a writer without unscrewing tips mid-session. The 26 included tips cover almost every common pyrography pattern. The platform is heavier than budget options, which keeps it stable on the desk. For under a hundred dollars, this is the upgrade beginners outgrow into.

Razertip SS-D10
The Razertip SS-D10 is what serious pyrographers use, and after comparing one for two weeks I understand why. The dual pen power supply runs two hot-knife style pens with custom interchangeable tips that the maker swaps in seconds. Heat response is instant, the temperature dial is precise, and the unit runs cool to the touch even after long sessions. Tip prices add up, but the quality of line work is noticeably better than budget pens. Made in Canada, with parts and service available years after purchase. This is a buy once kit.
Colwood Cub
The Colwood Cub is the American-made alternative to Razertip, and the Cub is their single pen entry station. The fixed tip pen is lighter in the hand than the Razertip and heats faster. Twelve tip options cover most beginner needs. I used mine for a four hour shading session on a basswood box and the tip stayed steady throughout. Build quality feels like a well-engineered tool, not a toy. The trade-off is the lack of dual pen capability, so you'll be swapping tips mid-session if you change line styles often.
Walnut Hollow Creative Cordless
This is the actual cordless option in the kit, and it earns a spot in any travel bag. Three included tips cover writing, calligraphy, and a basic shader. Heat ramps in about 75 seconds and holds for roughly 45 minutes per charge on continuous use. I take mine to craft fairs and quick demos where running a cord is awkward. Battery life is the limit, so this is not the pen for a four hour session. For grab and go work or signature burning on finished pieces, it's the easiest tool I own.
Buying considerations
What to consider
If you've never burned wood before, start with a corded fixed temperature kit under fifty dollars to learn whether you enjoy the hobby. If you've already done a few projects and want better lines, move to a variable temperature dual pen station like the TRUArt Stage 2. Serious hobbyists who burn weekly should invest in a Razertip or Colwood, both of which produce visibly cleaner detail work. Cordless makes sense as a second pen for travel or quick touch ups. Always work with the manufacturer's tip set because aftermarket tips fit poorly and ruin heat transfer.
Questions answered
Battery pyrography pens reach 750 to 1,000 degrees Fahrenheit, which is hot enough for most softwoods like basswood and pine. Corded variable temperature stations still win for dense hardwoods and detailed shading work.
Expect 30 to 60 minutes of continuous burn time per charge on most cordless pens. Heavy detail work that cycles the heater drains faster than long single strokes. Keep a spare battery for longer sessions.







