Walnut

A-Z of DIY & Building Guides Wood Types

Email this page
Date Published:
22/05/2008

Despite the prevalence of more modern materials, the versatility and beauty of timber has ensured its appearance in most homes today. This guide will help you tell one species from the next and tell you which type should be used for your DIY project.

Botanists divide timber into two main categories; softwoods and hardwoods. These terms can cause confusion, but simply softwoods come from coniferous (needle leaved) trees and hardwoods come from deciduous trees and evergreen broadleaved trees. The terms softwood and hardwood are botanical and don't necessarily indicate their end use.

Much of the softwood used in the UK comes from European, sustainably managed forests and is a very popular choice amongst consumers today. It can be bought competitively and will compare well in terms of cost comparisons with many other building materials.

This article comes courtesy of www.woodforgood.com

Natural Pine (Redwood)

Natural Pine (Redwood)
One of the most popular softwoods available and used to create solid timber flooring, furniture and doors.

Ash

Ash
Used in light coloured furniture and panelling and creates a luxury, hardwearing, solid, timber floor. It is temperate, tough and resilient.

Beech

Beech
Can range in colour from pale brown to light reddish brown. It is wear resistant and is used in furniture production and framing.

Birch

Birch
A beautiful and durable material ideal for elegant interior decoration and furniture.

Cherry

Cherry
This wood has a highly decorative colour and is used for more specialised crafted furniture and decorative work.

Birch Plywood

Birch Plywood
Can be used for almost anything and it's versatility makes it good for furniture.

Chestnut

Chestnut
A hardwearing timber with lots of character.

English Oak

English Oak
Light yellow brown with its annual rings clearly visible. Used in joinery, floors, stairs, furniture and panelling.

Walnut

Walnut
Used to make furniture and also used for panelling. It is golden brown with dark streaks.

Natural Spruce (Whitewood)

Natural Spruce (Whitewood)
A lighter colour than pine. Commonly used to make staircases and in general construction.

Back to top

Your Comments

Post your comment

Please note: In order to post a comment you need to be registered and logged in to Channel 4:

Sign In Here or Register Here

Comments closed

Comments are closed at the present time

Your comments

Post your comment
By posting on this website you are agreeing to abide by our Comments Policy.
Mandatory Fields are marked with *
Your Comment (Maximum characters: 4000) *
You have

Comments

Thank you for your comment!

Your message will be reviewed and the best ones will be published below.

If you intended to make an official comment to Channel 4 please contact us.

Comments

  1. Dear, sir/madam Hello, my name is Abubaker Egal in year 10 at the City of Leicester College. I am studying GCSE RMT long course. This course consists of making things out of raw material. Recently I have started my project on storage units and I am going to start my storage unit soon I want to make a storage unit for TV, PS2 and some CD’s. For my research I have decided to ask companies what wood they use to make a PS2 stand and what there most popular piece of furniture is what it looks like and what wood you use to make a PS2 stand and any other materials needed? Please reply soon! Yours faithfully
    Posted by Abubaker Egal on 26/09/2008 14:46:52
    Offensive? Unsuitable? Report this comment

Advertisement

More on 4Homes

4Homes Property Search

Over 300,000 properties to search, interactive maps, neighbourhood reports and more...

 

e.g. Notting Hill, SW3, Glasgow

Powered by: Nestoria

Advertisement


4Homes

Skip Channel4 main Navigation
Explore Channel4
Food
Homes
Film
4Car
News
See All

Channel 4 © 2009. Channel 4 is not responsible for the content of external websites.