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Wood Types we use

Picture Description

Mahogany

 

Mahoni (Swietenia macrophylla) is a very large tree, reaching a height of 30-40 m.  The high value attached to S. macrophylla wood in the international markets is well known. The heartwood is red-brown in appearance.

English Oak

English Oak Q. robur is a large deciduous tree 25–35 m tall (exceptionally to 50 m), with lobed and nearly sessile (very short-stalked) leaves 7–14 cm long. Flowering takes place in mid spring, and their fruit, called acorns, ripen by the following autumn. The acorns are 2–2.5 cm long, pedunculate (having a peduncle or acorn-stalk, 3–7 cm long) with one to four acorns on each peduncle.

It is a long-lived tree, with a large wide spreading head of rugged branches. While it may naturally live to an age of a few centuries, many of the oldest trees are pollarded or coppiced, both pruning techniques that extend the tree's potential lifespan, if not its health.

Thuya Burl

Thuya Burl comes from a tree that is the only known representative of its genus, Tetraclinis articulatenglish.  This tree is native to northwestern Africa, specifically to the Atlas Mountain regions of Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia.  The hard heartwood varies in color from a glistening golden brown to a dark hue that is almost black. The Thuya wood tends to display a figure called “eyes” which are perfectly round and scattered throughout some burls, while in others they are clumped together in what appear to be islands of eyes. The figure is similar to bird’s eye maple but the overall effect is much darker and easier to discern. The wood is oily and very aromatic with an incredibly pleasing scent reminiscent of pine and black pepper

 

Monkey Pod

 

A truely stunning wood

Saman is a wide-canopied tree with a large symmetrical crown often grown to shade plantations or at the side of  roads. It usually reaches a height of 25 metres (82 ft) and a diameter of 40 metres (130 ft)[1]. The leaves fold in rainy weather and in the evening, hence the name Rain Tree and '5 o'clock Tree' (Pukul Lima) in Malay. Several lineages of this tree are available e.g. with reddish pink and creamish golden colored flowers.

Coconut Wood

The Coconut Palm (Cocos nucifera) is a member of the Family Arecaceae (palm family). It is the only species in the genus Cocos, and is a large palm, growing to 30 m tall, with pinnate leaves 4-6 m long, pinnae 60-90 cm long; old leaves break away cleanly leaving the trunk smooth. The term coconut refers to the fruit of the coconut palm.

The coconut palm is grown throughout the tropical world, for decoration as well as for its many culinary and non-culinary uses; virtually every part of the coconut palm has some human uses.

 

 

Wood Types

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