Lumber - Kingwood
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Description
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A chess piece made from kingwood.
Kingwood is a classic furniture wood, almost exclusively used for
inlays on very fine furniture. Occasionally it is used in the solid for small
items and turned work, including parts of billiard cues, e.g., those made by
John
Parris. It is brownish-purple with many fine darker stripes and occasional
irregular swirls. Occasionally it contains pale streaks of a similar colour to
the sapwood, as in the picture.
The wood is very dense and hard and can be brought to a spectacular finish.
It turns well but due to its density and hardness it can be difficult to work
with hand tools. It also has a tendency to blunt tools due to its abrasive
properties.
It is available only in small sizes (it is yielded by a smallish tree,
Dalbergia cearensis, restricted to a small area in Brazil). Other woods
yielded by the
same genus
are cocobolo,
rosewood,
blackwood
and tulipwood.
| NAME |
Kingwood |
| COLOR |
brownish-purple with many fine darker stripes and occasional
irregular swirls |
| GRAIN |
|
| TEXTURE |
|
| FIGURE |
|
| USES |
|
S
tocking
|