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  2. Spalting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spalting

    Spalting is divided into three main types: pigmentation, white rot, and zone lines.Spalted wood may exhibit one or all of these types in varying degrees. Both hardwoods and softwoods can spalt, but zone lines and white rot are more commonly found on hardwoods due to enzymatic differences in white rotting fungi.

  3. Wood stain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wood_stain

    Different wood species stain differently—the overall colour and shade is a result of a combination of the stain and properties of the wood. For example, although medium-to-dark stains tend to look blotchy on maple, they get deeper and more glowing on cherry, with a more consistent colouration. [3]

  4. Ammonia fuming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ammonia_fuming

    Fumed oak choir stalls at Clonfert Cathedral, Ireland. Ammonia fuming is a wood finishing process that darkens wood and brings out the grain pattern. It consists of exposing the wood to fumes from a strong aqueous solution of ammonium hydroxide which reacts with the tannins in the wood.

  5. Flame maple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flame_maple

    Split tiger maple log shows the physical waviness. When wood from a tree with undulating grain is split, the wood splits along the undulations, so that the split log shows, and one can feel, the physical waviness. Tiger maple sawn flat and stained. The stain accentuates the alternating flat and end grain of the wood.

  6. Wood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wood

    Black Maple Acer nigrum: Green 520 22.5 54 Black Maple Acer nigrum: 12.00% 570 46.1 92 Red Maple Acer rubrum: Green 490 22.6 53 Red Maple Acer rubrum: 12.00% 540 45.1 92 Silver Maple Acer saccharinum: Green 440 17.2 40 Silver Maple Acer saccharinum: 12.00% 470 36 61 Sugar Maple Acer saccharum: Green 560 27.7 65 Sugar Maple Acer saccharum: 12.00 ...

  7. Fruitwood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fruitwood

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