I posted this one to !woodworking@lemmy.ca too, as I do most of my furniture projects, but I’m particularly proud of how this one came out. Solid white oak with genuine mortise-and-tenon joinery.
I posted this one to !woodworking@lemmy.ca too, as I do most of my furniture projects, but I’m particularly proud of how this one came out. Solid white oak with genuine mortise-and-tenon joinery.
We’ll see how well my joinery holds up. This is actually the first project I’ve successfully built with f’real tenons.
Oak is rapidly becoming a favorite material of mine.
Very beautiful! I wish oak was more available where I’m at.
Why is it becoming your favorite?
Well first of all it’s quite attractive when finished, I really like the figure of the grain and the medullary rays are particularly attractive in white oak.
It’s a multifunctional wood, it’s well rot and bug resistant so when finished correctly it holds up well outdoors, it’s hard and durable enough to use as tabletops or other surfaces that get a lot of wear, and especially when quarter sawn it’s quite stable.
It’s not as blade meltingly hard as maple or hickory and not as gooey and resinous as pine. I quite like how it smells as you cut it, reminds me a lot of bourbon (in fact white oak is why bourbon smells the way it does). The grain is large but straight and even, there aren’t many surprises halfway through a cut where you suddenly hit something dense. It is definitely a hard wood but it’s not too tough on tools.
It finishes beautifully; Freshly sanded it’s pale tan with a slight pink cast to it but it takes on a very nice gold when oiled or varnished and the medullary rays form fascinating patterns.
It sounds like a real joy to work with. All of the cabinets in our house are oak.
Mine are birch plywood or worse. The shelves in my bathroom linen closet I shit ye not are half inch OSB. Maybe someday I’ll redo those.
Sounds like you have a great future project!