PDA

View Full Version : Wood ID



Jerry Solomon
04-20-2022, 8:26 PM
A family member sent me the attached photo of a table she has. She wants to know what type of wood it is made from. In looking at the photo, I might guess maple. It doesn't appear to be some of the more common things I have worked with like red/white oak, mahogany, or walnut. When I get beyond those I really have to start guessing. Anybody want to play "name that wood"?

Lee Schierer
04-20-2022, 9:14 PM
Have her take some more photos without the glare from the windows. Shots, straight down toward the table top. Don't use a flash.

Dave Roock
04-20-2022, 10:23 PM
Looks like Oak with the Golden Oak stain color - very popular some years back.

Sean Nagle
04-21-2022, 12:00 AM
Alder top.

Frank Pratt
04-21-2022, 12:15 AM
Definitely not oak.

Brian Tymchak
04-21-2022, 3:39 PM
Could be Birch but I'm leaning towards Beech. Would like a shot of end grain.

Prashun Patel
04-21-2022, 6:39 PM
Is that made by Canadel by any chance?

I suspect Birch if it was a North American larger scale manufacturer.

Dave Zellers
04-21-2022, 10:58 PM
I need to see a picture of the bark. :cool:

Barring that, agree with birch.

Andrew Seemann
04-23-2022, 7:59 PM
Hard to tell from the picture, but I see little ray flecks in the top, so probably maple. Oak and beech have fleck, but it doesn't have the grain of beech or the pores of oak.

Bottom and skirting under the top look more like birch or maybe well stained poplar.

Jim Morgan
04-23-2022, 9:14 PM
100% certain that it is tree-wood. Beyond that ...

Wood identification from clear, high-resolution photographs of cleanly cut end grain is generally accurate.

Wood identification from blurry, low resolution photographs of face grain, particularly when it is stained and commercially finished, is little better than guessing.

Alex Zeller
04-23-2022, 9:18 PM
Looks more like birch than maple to me. The maple I use the grain pattern is different. Often there's a difference in color that makes the long wavy grain stand out.