Cc

Casper

09/05/2016 10:46 AM

Countertops

Ran across these great looking cherry countertops and was wondering
how well they will hold up to daily abuse.

http://lumberjocks.com/projects/244786#comment-3160274


This topic has 7 replies

b

in reply to Casper on 09/05/2016 10:46 AM

10/05/2016 10:25 AM

On Tuesday, May 10, 2016 at 1:23:13 PM UTC-4, [email protected] wrote:
> On Tuesday, May 10, 2016 at 12:15:48 PM UTC-4, BenignBodger wrote:
> > On 5/9/2016 10:46 AM, Casper wrote:
> > > Ran across these great looking cherry countertops and was wondering
> > > how well they will hold up to daily abuse.
> > >
> > > http://lumberjocks.com/projects/244786#comment-3160274
> > >
> >
> > Very pretty but I doubt the beauty would last much beyond the photo shoot
> > if the kitchen was actually used for its intended purpose. I've only seen
> > one working kitchen with wooden countertops that I'd want to emulate. That
> > was in a kitchen at a B&B in the Scottish highlands where I stayed; they
> > had 5cm beech strip countertops which were sourced somewhere in the old
> > Soviet bloc and which had no shiny finish to show the wear. After several
> > years of relatively heavy usage they still looked presentable.
>
> What if wood hardener, such as http://www.amazon.com/Minwax-41700-Pint-Performance-Hardener/dp/B000BPINKS, was used prior to final finish? Would this be a food-safe no-no?

or penetrating epoxy, such as http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00J36WRRG/ref=pe_1861300_151303840_em_1p_0_ti ?

Sk

Swingman

in reply to Casper on 09/05/2016 10:46 AM

10/05/2016 6:25 PM

On 5/10/2016 12:23 PM, [email protected] wrote:

> What if wood hardener, such as http://www.amazon.com/Minwax-41700-Pint-Performance-Hardener/dp/B000BPINKS, was used prior to final finish? Would this be a food-safe no-no?


Although they are not unheard (Butcher block counter tops come into and
out of vogue), there is a good reason you don't often see wooden counter
tops in a residential kitchen.

Even with the thickest of finishes (the type you see in bars) the
environment just isn't conducive to longevity.

As long as you are prepared to refinish them about ever 10 years or so,
like the look, and consider the inevitable dings and gouges as
attractive "character", they are certainly doable.

The other considerations is future sale value. Having built and sold a
number of houses, and unless things change drastically in the future, I
can pretty well say they would not be adding value after moderate use,
simply because of the continuing maintenance required.

Then again, for every home for sale, there is someone for whom it is ideal.

While I think the photo was absolutely gorgeous, IMO it is an
impractical solution for the task.

YMMV...

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b

in reply to Casper on 09/05/2016 10:46 AM

10/05/2016 10:23 AM

On Tuesday, May 10, 2016 at 12:15:48 PM UTC-4, BenignBodger wrote:
> On 5/9/2016 10:46 AM, Casper wrote:
> > Ran across these great looking cherry countertops and was wondering
> > how well they will hold up to daily abuse.
> >
> > http://lumberjocks.com/projects/244786#comment-3160274
> >
>
> Very pretty but I doubt the beauty would last much beyond the photo shoot
> if the kitchen was actually used for its intended purpose. I've only seen
> one working kitchen with wooden countertops that I'd want to emulate. That
> was in a kitchen at a B&B in the Scottish highlands where I stayed; they
> had 5cm beech strip countertops which were sourced somewhere in the old
> Soviet bloc and which had no shiny finish to show the wear. After several
> years of relatively heavy usage they still looked presentable.

What if wood hardener, such as http://www.amazon.com/Minwax-41700-Pint-Performance-Hardener/dp/B000BPINKS, was used prior to final finish? Would this be a food-safe no-no?

kk

krw

in reply to Casper on 09/05/2016 10:46 AM

09/05/2016 11:57 AM

On Mon, 09 May 2016 10:46:14 -0400, Casper <[email protected]>
wrote:

>Ran across these great looking cherry countertops and was wondering
>how well they will hold up to daily abuse.
>
>http://lumberjocks.com/projects/244786#comment-3160274

They look beautiful but I'd never have them in a family kitchen.
They'd never last and there are far better materials for countertops.

Ll

Leon

in reply to Casper on 09/05/2016 10:46 AM

09/05/2016 10:14 AM

On 5/9/2016 9:46 AM, Casper wrote:
> Ran across these great looking cherry countertops and was wondering
> how well they will hold up to daily abuse.
>
> http://lumberjocks.com/projects/244786#comment-3160274
>


Cherry is a relatively soft wood. I think it might be my last choice
for a kitchen counter top.

Cherry is about 10% harder than "Longleaf" Pine. About 80% harder than
"yellow" Poplar which is really soft.

dd

"dadiOH"

in reply to Casper on 09/05/2016 10:46 AM

09/05/2016 11:28 AM

Casper wrote:
> Ran across these great looking cherry countertops and was wondering
> how well they will hold up to daily abuse.
>
> http://lumberjocks.com/projects/244786#comment-3160274

Not well. Not so much because it is cherry but because the top finish is
going to get scratched, worn, etc. Being cherry, it will also get dented
(in all probability) and that is also going to mess up the top coats.

Bn

BenignBodger

in reply to Casper on 09/05/2016 10:46 AM

10/05/2016 12:14 PM

On 5/9/2016 10:46 AM, Casper wrote:
> Ran across these great looking cherry countertops and was wondering
> how well they will hold up to daily abuse.
>
> http://lumberjocks.com/projects/244786#comment-3160274
>

Very pretty but I doubt the beauty would last much beyond the photo shoot
if the kitchen was actually used for its intended purpose. I've only seen
one working kitchen with wooden countertops that I'd want to emulate. That
was in a kitchen at a B&B in the Scottish highlands where I stayed; they
had 5cm beech strip countertops which were sourced somewhere in the old
Soviet bloc and which had no shiny finish to show the wear. After several
years of relatively heavy usage they still looked presentable.


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