Here is a little preview our next project! As is the case with most of the items we
make it all starts with finding great materials. We happened to run across this dark grained slab piece while at
Owl Hardwood. Walked by it a few time,
didn’t have a species listed and no price (usually that’s not a good sign), so
inquired as to what it was and the cost.
Needless to say they told me it was Santos Rosewood.
This picture is an unfinished edge piece taken off the slab, you see the light color sap wood and whats left of the outer surface and of course the heartwood.
So after a little more questioning I found out that it’s
pretty unusual that you get slab pieces intact with this species due to the
nature of the way the tree grows (the interior either rots or shrinks or gets
torn up in the growing process). Also
this stuff is pricey, on order of $25/board foot. As a comparison Cherry is $6-8 a board foot. I finally decided I needed to take this and
figure out something to do with it.
Here is a link to the particulars for Santos Rosewood. One of the most interesting material aspects
to this piece is its weight, 54 lbs per cubic foot (this is pretty dense wood).
We have seen many who will use an epoxy fill for the crack
region to provide structure and close up the opening. Me first thought was to build an LED lighting system below as an
accent to the piece with some lighting showing thru. The test cases I tried just didn’t turn out like I thought. Also decided I didn’t want to fill the crack
so I plan on building up some underside wings to give the piece some structure and support
the open cracked middle section. Not
exactly sure how this open crack will ‘age’ but I personally like the look. Can’t wait to share the finishing process so
you can see how great this wood looks.
So I came up with a general design idea (shown below). I thought a light wood might tie into the
live edge of the top would be nice with some inlayed pieces of Rosewood on the
base to pull it all together. Decided
that hard maple was going to be used for the base, a nice hardwood without too
much busy grain to distract from the top.
So many of our designs start this way with a simple
layout. As you can see the design is a
floating top. From this type of view
you can see the straps to secure the top that I spoke of previously and the
gentle curve in the legs to match the top (which exposes a little bit more of
the Rosewood accent near the top of the legs).
Since then I have grabbed another slab piece (not as in good shape as the first) and many pieces of edge stock for accent pieces for future projects.
Stay tunes for updates as we start the process of finishing
the Rosewood top piece.
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