Best selling wood projects
One of my favourite timbers to work with would have to be Blackbutt. Western Australian Blackbutt, to be precise - Eucalyptus patens. A very hard, dense and light coloured timber, the tree grows naturally in the wetter areas of the jarrah forest in the south west of Western Australia. Around the edges of swamps and watercourses, and in low lying areas. A tiny proportion of the original forest now remains. With most of these remnant trees now locked up in National Parks and stream reserves, it is not as readily available as it used to be. Fortunately, my mate Terry at Heritage Sawmillers http://www.wahardwoods.com.au/ can still get hold of a few logs every now and then. That is where I obtain most of my Blackbutt timber.
For those who like the technical stuff, Blackbutt is a hard wood. The Air Dried Density (at 12% moisture content) for WA Blackbutt is 930kg/m3, compared with 530kg/m3 for Douglas Fir, and 700kg/m3 for European Oak. (Source: Wood in Australia, Keith Bootle, 1983, published by McGraw Hill.)
Yep, its hard and dense!
A blackbutt kitchen.
I dont make kitchen cabinets any more as a rule, but I did build one recently over a period of months for Tim and Bec. You know, its family. Long ago, I did a lot of kitchens for customers, but my construction methods have always been different to the modern cabinetmaking industry norm. While the insides (shelves, backs and dividers) might be the normal white melamine faced MDF board, my kitchen cabinets are different in that I
I dont make kitchen cabinets any more as a rule, but I did build one recently over a period of months for Tim and Bec. You know, its family. Long ago, I did a lot of kitchens for customers, but my construction methods have always been different to the modern cabinetmaking industry norm. While the insides (shelves, backs and dividers) might be the normal white melamine faced MDF board, my kitchen cabinets are different in that I
A shot of the cabinets under construction, showing the internal framing. |
It is a method I learned from Harry Kornoff when I worked for him back in the early 1980s. Thanks, Harry! These are kitchens built to last, with not just timber framing but solid timber doors and panelling too. While I have done plenty of solid timber benchtops on these kitchens, Tim and Bec were having one of those black granite-look tops.
A few pics of Tim and Becs kitchen:
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The black granite tops and the Blackbutt doors and panelling go together very nicely. |
The jarrah floors also look good with the Blackbutt cabinets. |
Thats an appliance cupboard in the corner on the benchtop. |
Nice looking kitchen, eh? |
A few more pics featuring WA Blackbutt:
WA Blackbutt spoons I made some years ago for a customer. Sorry about the grainy picture. |
WA Blackbutt Table, titled "Four Foot Long". (Circa 1990). |
WA Blackbutt panel (with carved detail shown) in the front of a Font I made for the Leeuwin Barracks Chapel, 2009. The Altar and Lecturn are also made from Jarrah with the feature Blackbutt front panel.
WA Blackbutt drawer sides in this Hall Table (2007) contrast nicely with the jarrah, highlighting the dovetails. |
... By the way, did I mention how much I love working with WA Blackbutt?
Best selling wood projects
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