Pp

"Pawel"

14/03/2006 12:55 PM

what wood to match to aromatic cedar

i am planning to build shelves and drawers in the walk in closet, to built
it up complelelty/
I already bought 1/4 thin aromactic cedar boards for shelves and walls and
am wonderking what wood
to use for the framing. I am considering oak (the cheapest) or cherry (most
expensive :-() or mabye walnut. what would be best color match without
staining?

thanks

pawel


This topic has 9 replies

dd

"dadiOH"

in reply to "Pawel" on 14/03/2006 12:55 PM

15/03/2006 1:02 AM

Pawel wrote:
> is aromatic cedar strong enough?

Sure. Certainly for what you are doing.

--
dadiOH
____________________________

dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
...a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico

mm

"marcaf"

in reply to "Pawel" on 14/03/2006 12:55 PM

14/03/2006 5:11 PM


Too thin for shelves I think. Anyway, you could always use a tinted oil
finish on cheaper wood.



www.marcalanfreedman.com

Sc

"Sonny"

in reply to "Pawel" on 14/03/2006 12:55 PM

14/03/2006 5:24 PM

Hi Pawel,

Aromatic cedar is strong enough for the framing you want to do. By A.
cedar not being strong enough for furniture framing, it is meant that
for a chair, a table or anything that will require a shifting weight,
then A. cedar may be compromised as for as the strength. It splits
easily, so any stress or sheer force has a tendency to cause it to
split or crack. Your closet cabinets don't fit that category of use.

Also, since it is so resinous, glued joints, and doweled joints, of
stressed furniture have more of a tendency to fail. Pegged mortise &
tenon joints work well, and usually the exposed pegs are especially
appealing since many A. cedar projects often times suit the rustic
atmosphere.

If nailing your framing, air-nailing cedar framing is favored, also
.... less likely to split as when using a hammer.

Sonny

mm

"marcaf"

in reply to "Pawel" on 14/03/2006 12:55 PM

15/03/2006 4:10 AM

Thanks for your feedback. Yes they are hand carved, oiled, then waxed.
Good luck on your closet.

marc

mm

"marcaf"

in reply to "Pawel" on 14/03/2006 12:55 PM

15/03/2006 4:11 AM

Thanks for your feedback. Yes they are hand carved, oiled, then waxed.
Good luck on your closet.

marc


http://marcafreedman.com/

Lr

"Leon"

in reply to "Pawel" on 14/03/2006 12:55 PM

15/03/2006 3:15 PM


"Pawel" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>i am planning to build shelves and drawers in the walk in closet, to built
>it up complelelty/
> I already bought 1/4 thin aromactic cedar boards for shelves and walls and
> am wonderking what wood
> to use for the framing. I am considering oak (the cheapest) or cherry
> (most expensive :-() or mabye walnut. what would be best color match
> without staining?


Redwood would be close.

Pp

"Pawel"

in reply to "Pawel" on 14/03/2006 12:55 PM

14/03/2006 3:39 PM

is aromatic cedar strong enough? I though that i read it here on the list
that it is to weak to build furniture with it and was planning to make frame
from something else and fill it with thin planks of aromatic cedar?

pawel


"dadiOH" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:qEERf.9840$o41.5051@trnddc06...
> Pawel wrote:
>> i am planning to build shelves and drawers in the walk in closet, to
>> built it up complelelty/
>> I already bought 1/4 thin aromactic cedar boards for shelves and
>> walls and am wonderking what wood
>> to use for the framing. I am considering oak (the cheapest) or cherry
>> (most expensive :-() or mabye walnut. what would be best color match
>> without staining?
>
> Nothing will match it in color. Why not just use eastern (aromatic)
> cedar?
>
>
> --
> dadiOH
> ____________________________
>
> dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
> ...a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
> LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
> Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico
>
>

Pp

"Pawel"

in reply to "Pawel" on 14/03/2006 12:55 PM

14/03/2006 10:55 PM

Wow I love you beautiful bowls, trays and sculptured, No. 101 and No 135 are
my absolute favourites. Are they all hand carved and then polished? I can't
way for the "The Process" page to be finished.
I do love solid thick wood too so i see where you are coming from sayng 1/4
is nothing

I do plan shelves to be made of two 4 inch wide 4/4 boards with short 10-12
inch perpendicular slats , this is where the 1/4 stock will go,
for closet shelves to be used with folded cloth and light stuff like this i
would assume this should be enough.
thanks

pawel

"marcaf" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> Too thin for shelves I think. Anyway, you could always use a tinted oil
> finish on cheaper wood.
>
>
>
> www.marcalanfreedman.com
>

dd

"dadiOH"

in reply to "Pawel" on 14/03/2006 12:55 PM

14/03/2006 7:16 PM

Pawel wrote:
> i am planning to build shelves and drawers in the walk in closet, to
> built it up complelelty/
> I already bought 1/4 thin aromactic cedar boards for shelves and
> walls and am wonderking what wood
> to use for the framing. I am considering oak (the cheapest) or cherry
> (most expensive :-() or mabye walnut. what would be best color match
> without staining?

Nothing will match it in color. Why not just use eastern (aromatic)
cedar?


--
dadiOH
____________________________

dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
...a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico


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