Choosing
Wood for Ready-to-Finish Furniture:
Information
provided by
Wood has long been
the material of choice for quality furniture for many good reasons:
Wood is available
in various colors, grains and hardnesses. It can be cut and shaped into
a large variety of attractive designs.
Wood is shock-resistant
and very durable, generally outlasting synthetic materials. Scratches
and nicks are easy to touch up.
Wood has lasting
value. Genuine wood furniture may cost more in the beginning, but it
often grows in value as it is handed down from one generation to another.
With ready-to-finish
wood furniture you can add and match other pieces at any time. This
is often not possible with prefinished furniture.
Types
of Wood:
Ready-to-finish furniture
is available in many types of wood, each with special characteristics.
And because each tree yields lumber with its own grain patterns and
character markings, each piece of genuine wood furniture has a unique
personality.
You may not be familiar
with every type of wood, but all make quality furnishings of various
types. Pop's Furniture will be happy to advise you about the stains
and finishes to use for best results on each type. Here are the kinds
of wood commonly used to make ready-to-finish furniture:
Alder
is a hardwood from the Pacific Northwest. It is very consistent in color
and takes stain well. It ranks second behind pine as the wood most commonly
used for ready-to-finish furniture. Alder gives the look of many fine
hardwoods such as Birch or Western Maple at a reasonable price.
Pine
is a softwood that comes in many varieties from various parts of the
world. In the U.S., Eastern White Pine, Ponderosa Pine and Sugar Pine
are some of the varieties used to make furniture. All have yellow coloring
with brown knots and are excellent for staining. With some stains a
sealer helps prepare the wood to achieve a more even look.
Radiata
Pine is a plantation-grown wood from South America that is
harder than other pines and has fewer knots. This variety of pine has
a beautiful grain pattern.
Parawood
from the Far East is used for much of the furniture made in that part
of the world. The wood is as hard as maple or ash and takes a very even
stain. It is yellow in color, with a grain similar to oak (often referred
to as Malaysian Oak).
Oak
is a very hard, open-grain wood that comes in red or white varieties.
Red Oak, which has a pinkish cast, is the more popular of the two. White
Oak has a slight greenish cast. Both woods stain well in any color.
Maple
is especially abundant in the eastern U.S. It is a very light-colored
hardwood with a very even grain texture. Eastern maples are generally
harder than Western Maples because of the colder winters and shorter
growing seasons. Both are very durable and take any color of stain well.
Ash
is a long-fibered, light-colored hardwood with a tight grain much like
Birch or Maple. It is good for bending, takes stain well and is used
mainly for chairs and stools.
Aspen
is a softer, light-colored, even-grained hardwood. It accepts most stains
well, but may need a sealer or a coat of mineral spirits to achieve
an even stain. Non-penetrating stains work best on this wood.
Beech
grows primarily in the Northeast and Canada. It is a cream-colored hardwood
often used for sporting equipment, such as baseball bats. It has an
open grain pattern similar to that of Oak and takes stains well.
Birch
is a fine-grained hardwood that grows primarily in the Northeast and
Canada. White in color, it takes any color of stain well.
Eucalyptus
is a hardwood that earns high marks for strength, durability and offers
excellent weathering characteristics.
Red
Shorea is a tropical hardwood native to Southeast Asia that
has much of the same characteristics as Teak. It is denser and heavier
than Teak and its color, like Teak, will turn a soft grey over time.
Pop's Furniture
offers over 10,000 solid wood furniture items at discounted prices,
visit for more information on buying solid wood furniture..