American Black Walnut

Black Walnut's popularity among woodworkers in the United States. Its cooperative working characteristics, coupled with its rich brown coloration puts the wood in a class by itself among temperate-zone hardwoods. To cap it off, the wood also has good dimensional stability, shock resistance, and strength properties.

OAK

The United States being home to upwards of 60 different types. Oak is defined as a strong wood which offer superior strength and is widely used in custom furniture.

DISTRESSED MAPLE

Maple boasts our hardest wood, it accepts our proprietary aging process with ease. This dense wood species is characterized by tight and straight grains in earthy tones. Its soft colors offer an ideal backdrop for the dark stained signature marks of our distressed restaurant table tops.

SPALTED MAPLE

Spalted Maple is technically not a specific species of Maple, but rather a type of Maple that has been allowed to begin initial stages of decay. The partial decay, called spalting, gives the wood dark contrasting lines and streaks where fungus has begun to attack the wood. If it is rescued at the right time, is can create a beautiful unique custom piece.

EBONIZED OAK

Ebony is a beautiful decorative and ornate wood that is very dense. Ebonizing wood is the effect of darkening or blackening a naturally lighter colored wood to appear more like black ebony wood.

TEAK

Teak wood is a dense, close-grained type of hardwood that is sourced from the Tectona grandis tree, native to south and southeast Asia. Teak is originally golden in colour and has a smooth grain and texture.

BLEACHED OAK

Bleached Oak is a beautiful, durable and affordable light grey toned reconstituted veneer made from renewable wood species. A soft, creamy white Oak floor, Broadleaf Bleached Oak flooring is the ideal choice for any room that you want to be light, calm and airy.

MAPLE

Maple wood is incredibly strong, looks great, and stains nicely. Woodworkers and furniture aficionados gravitate towards maple for its light, creamy color, smooth grain pattern, and impressive durability.

Ambrosia Maple

Ambrosia maple, also known as wormy maple, is a general classification for maple lumber. Ambrosia Maple Lumber is in the Soft Maple family of woods. It is prized for its unique patterns and streaking.

Bastotne Walnut

Typically easy to work provided the grain is straight and regular. Bastogne colors can vary from lighter golden yellow to reddish brown, sometimes with darker brown to nearly black streaks.

Claro Walnut

Claro is the wood of the Hindis walnut tree that grows from California up to Washington. It has a subtle-but-gorgeous marbled color palette that's highly sought after. In fact, it's one of the more expensive types of wood — not only because of its color, but because it's durable, high-quality and easy to work with.

Pecan

Pecan falls into the Pecan-Hickory grouping, which tends to be slightly stabler but weaker than the True-Hickories, and is considered to be a semi-ring-porous wood. The strength characteristics of Pecan are somewhat influenced by the spacing of its growth rings.

Mahogany

Mahogany is known for its cooperative nature and easy sanding and machining, with a Goldilocks-esque balance of density thats just hard enough but not too hard. When the grain is straight and consistent, there’s not much that can go wrong.