Walnut is a lovely wood that is a pleasure to work with.Where the caveat lies in finding enough matching boards for a project. Thevariation of colors in walnut can vary wildly from tree to tree. Here we see 5 boards and at least 3 differentshades of walnut. I was trying my best to save the client some money and uselumber I already had in stock but… I’m good but not magic.
I had to head to mylumber dealer and search through his stock to find something that would match.The biggest board I had in stock has some reddish tinge to it so that’s what Ilooked for. It took a while but I found a real beauty that ended up beingperfect for the job. When I picked it I was planning on cutting off the barkbut, once I got it home and measured everything, it turned out that I needed tomake use of the entire board. I went ahead and peeled the bark off and realizedthat it had a really nice natural edge. I’ve never worked with live edge butafter checking that it was OK with the client, I went for it.
Here's the results of the resawing. You'll notice that the two boards at the bottom of the picture are a nice book match but the others are two different boards. And you can clearly see that one of the breadboard ends is another board again. The way I tried to work it out is a border of darker boards with the center field being lighter stuff. You can see it in the following picture.
Now here's a shot of the natural edge. I'll have to carefully trim one of the boards to try for a nice, smooth transition.
I mostly skipped taking pictures of the prep work on themain field of the table. It’s pretty boring stuff. I resawed the big board thatI started with to make 4 nice 1x6x34 boards. Resawing is when you set the boardup on its narrow edge and slice it into 2 thinner boards. I used my trusty oldDelta bandsaw that restored real-time right here on this blog. I really lovethat saw.
Here's the results of the resawing. You'll notice that the two boards at the bottom of the picture are a nice book match but the others are two different boards. And you can clearly see that one of the breadboard ends is another board again. The way I tried to work it out is a border of darker boards with the center field being lighter stuff. You can see it in the following picture.
Now here's a shot of the natural edge. I'll have to carefully trim one of the boards to try for a nice, smooth transition.