We Know Wood
We carry 35 species of Hardwood's, so you don't have to. And we manufacture an infinite number of profiles including Long Length Flooring, Handrails (solid & fingerjoint), Stair Treads, S4S, and many other engineered hardwood parts.
Our World-Class Green Hardwood milling practices are environmentally friendly and result in savinigs for you!
D6100RO - 1/2 x 3-7/16 - Red Oak Crown Moulding
D6110 - 3/4" x 3-5/8" - Red Oak Crown Moulding
D6140 - 11/16" x 4 1/4" Red Oak Crown Moulding
D6080 - 9/16" x 2 1/4" - Red Oak Crown Moulding
9/16 x 2-1/4 x 8 Red Oak Crown Moulding
D6080TH - 3/8 x 2-1/4 Red Oak Crown Moulding(thin)
D6090 - 9/16" x 2 3/4" Red Oak Bed Moulding
D6100 - 11/16" x 3 7/16" - Red Oak Crown Moulding
The sapwood of red oak is white to light brown and the heartwood is a pinkish reddish brown. The wood is similar in general appearance to white oak, but with a slightly less pronounced figure due to the smaller rays. The wood is mostly straight-grained, with a coarse texture.
Physical Properties:
Hardness: 1510
Working Properties:
Red oak machines well, nailing and screwing are good although pre-boring is recommended, and it can be stained to a good finish. It can be stained with a wide range of finish tones. It dries slowly.
Where it Grows:
Throughout Eastern US
D6100KAL - 11/16 x 3-7/16 - Knotty Alder Crown Moulding
D6300AL - 3/4 x 3-1/2 - Alder Crown Moulding
Red alder, a relative of birch, is almost white when freshly cut but quickly changes on exposure to air, becoming light brown with a yellow or reddish tinge. Heartwood is formed only in trees of advanced age and there is no visible boundary between sap and heartwood. The wood is fairly straight-grained with a uniform texture.
Physical Properties:
Hardness: 590
Working Properties
Red alder machines well and is excellent for turning. It nails, screws and glues well, and can be sanded, painted, or stained to a good finish. When stained, it blends with walnut, mahogany or cherry. It dries easily with little degrade and has good dimensional stability after drying.
Where it Grows:
Pacific Northwest
D6300CH - 3/4 x 3-1/2 - Cherry Crown Moulding
D6090CH - 9/16 x 2-1/4 - Cherry Crown Moulding
D6100CH - 11/16 x 3-7/16 - Cherry Crown Moulding
The heartwood of cherry varies from rich red to reddish brown and will darken with age and on exposure to light. In contrast, the sapwood is creamy white. The wood has a fine uniform, straight grain, satiny, smooth texture, and may naturally contain brown pith flecks and small gum pockets.
Where it Grows
Throughout Midwestern and Eastern U.S. Main commercial areas: Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia and New York.
Working
Properties
Cherry is easy to machine, nails and glues well and when
sanded and stained, it produces an excellent smooth finish.
It dries fairly quickly with moderately high shrinkage, but
is dimensionally stable after kiln-drying.
Physical
Properties
Hardness: 1,470
D6300HICK - 3/4 x 3-1/2 - Hickory Crown Moulding
The hickories are an important group within the Eastern hardwood forests. Botanically they are split into two groups; the true hickories, and the pecan hickories (fruit bearing). The wood is virtually the same for both and is usually sold together. Hickory is the hardest, heaviest and strongest American wood. The sapwood of hickory is white, tinged with inconspicuous fine brown lines while the heartwood is pale to reddish brown. Both are coarse-textured and the grain is fine, usually straight but can be wavy or irregular.
Working
Properties
The heaviest of American hardwoods, the hickories can be
difficult to machine and glue, and are very hard to work with
hand tools, so care is needed. They hold nails and screws
well, but there is a tendency to split so pre-boring is
advised. The wood can be sanded to a good finish. The grain
pattern welcomes a full range of medium-to-dark finishes and
bleaching treatments. It can be difficult to dry and has high
shrinkage.
Physical Properties
Hardness: 1,820
Where it Grows
Eastern U.S., principal commercial areas: Central and Southern states.
D6100M - 11/16 x 3-7/16 - Hard Maple Crown Moulding
D6300M - 3/4 x 3-1/2 - Hard Maple Crown Moulding
D6090M - 9/16 x 2-1/4 - Hard Maple Crown Moulding
The sapwood is creamy white with a slight reddish brown tinge and the heartwood varies from light to dark reddish brown. The amount of darker brown heartwood can vary significantly according to growing region. Both sapwood and heartwood can contain pith fleck. The wood has a close fine, uniform texture and is generally straight-grained, but it can also occur as "curly," "fiddleback," and "birds-eye" figure.
Working
Properties
Hard maple dries slowly with high shrinkage, so it can be
susceptible to movement in performance. Pre-boring is
recommended when nailing and screwing. With care it machines
well, turns well, glues satisfactorily, and can be stained to
an outstanding finish. Polishes well and is suitable for
enamel finishes and brown tones.
Physical Properties
Hardness: 1,450
Where it Grows
Eastern U.S., principally Mid-Atlantic and Lake states.
D6370CH - 3/4 x 5-1/4 - Cherry Crown Moulding
The heartwood of cherry varies from rich red to reddish brown and will darken with age and on exposure to light. In contrast, the sapwood is creamy white. The wood has a fine uniform, straight grain, satiny, smooth texture, and may naturally contain brown pith flecks and small gum pockets.
Where it Grows
Throughout Midwestern and Eastern U.S. Main commercial areas: Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia and New York.
Working
Properties
Cherry is easy to machine, nails and glues well and when
sanded and stained, it produces an excellent smooth finish.
It dries fairly quickly with moderately high shrinkage, but
is dimensionally stable after kiln-drying.
Physical
Properties
Hardness: 1,470
D6130PG - 1 1/16 x 5 11/32" - Poplar Crown Moulding
D6230 - 3/4" x 5 1/2" - Crown Moulding
Crown Molding D2222 - 3/4" x 3 1/2"
Crown Molding D6040 - 5/8" x 1 5/8"