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Thread: The very best figured walnut. Is 50-100+/bd ft ever reasonable?

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  1. #1

    The very best figured walnut. Is 50-100+/bd ft ever reasonable?

    I have been looking for some pristine highly figured walnut. Nothing locally. The one picture was something that sold online before I could inquire. Not sure of the price. The other picture is on a website for a lumber place in Oregon but they do not have boards like that. One person said that comes long once in many years.

    I was offered some other highly figured boards with a tiger maple look but only Bastogne and when I do the math is it around $100/bd ft. Nice long wide thick boards. Not finding nicer at this time. It makes me wonder, is that the going rate for the very nicest boards? I am not asking what we want the boards to cost. I am wondering if anyone is familiar with the current very highly figured walnut market. Thanks.



    Screenshot 2024-03-21 at 9.36.25 AM.jpgClaroWalnut[7].jpg

  2. #2
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    Last year my "local" hardwood supplier (Highland Hardwoods in NH) had very nice curly walnut in 4/4 and 8/4 boards for $15-17/bf. Nice, but not spectacular-- not as dramatic as the ones in your picture. Perhaps there were better boards when the pile first went on sale, but I was late to the party. For a really spectacular board for a guitar from a specialty retailer, for example, I'd expect to pay double that, maybe 3x. Such boards show up on ebay with some regularity. You might give a call to the likes of Hearne to see what they have. If someone else is going to the trouble of pulling out the best boards from a big supply it's going to be expensive.

  3. #3
    Figure increases price
    Width increases price
    Thickness increases price

    $100/bf is very high, but possible for unique or rare wood.

    It has been this hobbyist's experience that the most prized cuts are often more abundantly and therefore economically obtained as veneer.

  4. #4
    I agree with Prashun

    There is also the species of walnut, English, Claro, etc and the type of figure you're after.
    The fiddleback or curly figure in the photos is rare in such large sections, so the price goes up.

  5. #5
    And Bastone Walnut alone is rare, much less any type of figured Bastone Walnut.

  6. #6
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    That is some beautiful material. The value beyond $8 - $10/bf for generic walnut around here would be specific to the material and your value of it. I know that does nothing to help you. Much like the furniture we make out of things, the value of those things can often be set by the observer / purchaser. Before I started doing this just for myself I would sell a large, figured, book-matched chest of drawers for about $4k. About 1/2 to 2/3rds of that would be materials (wood, glue, finish, environmentals, hardware). If you have a desire (or a buyer) that will cover $100/bf then yes, it is worth it. I can find some pretty beautiful material nearby if I spend my time instead of my money. I'm afraid that in the end placing a quantifiable number on an aesthetic is pretty subjective.
    "A hen is only an egg's way of making another egg".


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  7. #7
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    As was mentioned check with Hearn. Also Horizon hardwoods may have some I know they stock very nice walnut but don’t know about figured.
    Steve Jenkins, McKinney, TX. 469 742-9694
    Always use the word "impossible" with extreme caution

  8. #8
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    Very rare indeed as walnut is always scrutinized for the possibility of selling to the veneer market. That is really the place where all rare really high figured wood should go.

  9. #9
    oh.... I thought I posted this in Lumber Yard.

  10. #10
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    Hearne lists their figured at "$35+," so I bet you can get to $100/bf for stuff like your picture.

  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by James Jayko View Post
    Hearne lists their figured at "$35+," so I bet you can get to $100/bf for stuff like your picture.
    Giant step from $35 to $100

  12. #12
    i don't know what you're building, but can you do it with veneer? i have a full flitch of outstanding curly walnut, i think i paid $7 a foot for it many years ago. Certainly Wood's website shows a number of options. can the piece be done out of solid wood, veneered for the figure you want?

  13. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by Richard Coers View Post
    Giant step from $35 to $100
    Giant step from "available in the lumber yard" to "the very best available," too...

  14. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by Joel Gelman View Post
    oh.... I thought I posted this in Lumber Yard.
    The "Lumber Yard", is not about lumber. It's just a discussion area for Contributors that cannot be seen by non-contributors.

    For highly figured material like that, folks who specialize in lutherie materials are worthy of searching. I saw that Hearne was mentioned...they have an entire room in the big barn dedicated to instrument grade materials including highly figured wood. Be prepared to be sitting down when you get to the prices for this stuff, no matter where you end up buying it.
    Last edited by Jim Becker; 03-28-2024 at 11:21 AM.
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    The most expensive tool is the one you buy "cheaply" and often...

  15. #15
    It could be worse. At least you're not trying to buy a piece of "The Tree". A one-of-a-kind, quilted Mahagony tree. Last I saw, that runs about $13,600 a board foot.

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