American Black Cherry
All of the Cherry lumber we use comes from West Virginia and
Western Pennsylvania. The region grows the finest Cherry lumber
in the world. This incredible wood is a pale salmon color when
freshly cut and if left unstained will, with exposure to sunlight,
turn a dark reddish brown over time. The grain is some of the
most beautiful of any wood. From a woodworkers viewpoint it is
almost the perfect wood. It accepts stain remarkably well. It is
hard enough to not dent easily and to hold crisp details, yet it
soft enough to not get black burn marks when worked with modern
power tools. Of course because of all these things it is highly
sought after and commands a high price. In recent years prices
have been pushed even higher by a fast growing export market,
mostly to Asia. As prices have risen many manufactures have
switched to Cherry veneer and to making substitutions with lesser
woods stained a Cherry color. At Samuel S. Case we are committed
to building furniture from solid Cherry lumber.
Maple and Tiger Maple
While there are those that make every inch of a piece in Tiger
Maple, Mr. Case prefers a more restrained approach. At Samuel S.
Case we use Tiger Maple as an accent wood on pieces that are
primarily plain Maple. Generally the areas where we use Tiger
Maple are headboards, drawer fronts, raised panels, and Table
tops. About Tiger Maple
Maple Maple trees fall into two broad categories. Soft Maple
and Hard Maple. These terms are quite misleading because soft
Maple is not really soft. It is soft only in comparison to Hard or
Rock Maple. Soft Maple is harder than Cherry and most other woods.
The other common name for Soft Maple is Red Maple.
When Hard Maple has highly figured boards it is usually Birds
Eye Maple which is really lots of very small knots.
When Soft Maple has highly figured wood it is usually Tiger
Maple. Named because of its likeness to a Tiger’s stripes. It is
sometimes called fiddle back Maple because for centuries it has
been used to make violins. It is also sometimes called curly
Maple. However, this is not correct as curly Maple is a different
type of figuring. Tiger figuring is stripes that go across the
grain. Curley figuring is “S” shaped lines that run parallel to
the grain. Sometimes boards will have both Curly and Tiger
figuring.
Some people say that Tiger is a result of the grain not being
parallel to the log so that it is end gain showing on the face of
the board. This seems to make sense, but it may or may not be
true. Mostly no one knows what makes wood figured. It is one of
life's mysteries.
Tiger Maple is sold by small specialty lumber dealers. They
sometimes purchase it from the mainstream lumber industry who
consider it a defect and cull it out. In some cases loggers can
tell by looking at the outside of a log that it will have Tiger
figure and will sell these logs to the specialty dealers directly.
The supply of Tiger Maple is small and availability can be
sporadic. The quality of figured wood is a subjective matter that
requires a relationship of trust between the lumber dealer and the
furniture maker. These factors are all reasons that the mainstream
furniture industry does not use Tiger Maple. Also, using highly
figured wood to make furniture requires sorting and repositioning
the boards and making judgments and decisions during the building
process. The larger factories prefer to treat every board the
same so that production is fast and lower skilled workers can be
utilized. |