Wood Samples
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Red Oak
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Poplar (Paint Grade)
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Cherry
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General Description
The sapwood of red oak is white to light brown
and the heartwood is a pinkish reddish brown.
The wood is similar in general appearance to
white oak, but with a slightly less pronounced
figure due to the smaller rays. The wood is
mostly straight-grained, with a coarse texture. |
General Description
The sapwood is creamy white and may be streaked,
with the heartwood varying from pale yellowish
brown to olive green. The green color in the
heartwood will tend to darken on exposure to
light and turn brown. The wood has a medium to
fine texture and is straight-grained; has a
comparatively uniform texture. |
General Description
The heartwood of cherry varies from rich red to
reddish brown and will darken with age and on
exposure to light. In contrast, the sapwood is
creamy white. The wood has a fine uniform,
straight grain, satiny, smooth texture, and may
naturally contain brown pith flecks and small
gum pockets. |

Hard Maple |

Alder |

Black Walnut |
General Description
The sapwood is creamy white with a slight
reddish brown tinge and the heartwood varies
from light to dark reddish brown. The amount of
darker brown heartwood can vary significantly
according to growing region. Both sapwood and
heartwood can contain pith fleck. The wood has a
close fine, uniform texture and is generally
straight-grained, but it can also occur as
"curly," "fiddleback," and "birds-eye" figure. |
General Description
Red alder, a relative of birch, is almost white
when freshly cut but quickly changes on exposure
to air, becoming light brown with a yellow or
reddish tinge. Heartwood is formed only in trees
of advanced age and there is no visible boundary
between sap and heartwood. The wood is fairly
straight-grained with a uniform texture. |
General Description
The sapwood of walnut is creamy white, while the
heartwood is light brown to dark chocolate
brown, occasionally with a purplish cast and
darker streaks. The wood develops a rich patina
that grows more lustrous with age. Walnut is
usually supplied steamed, to darken sapwood. The
wood is generally straight-grained, but
sometimes with wavy or curly grain that produces
an attractive and decorative figure. This
species produces a greater variety of figure
types than any other. |
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These
samples represent a general color tone and graining only. Since wood is a natural
product and no two pieces are identical, variations in grain and
color are going to occur from one piece to the next.
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