DS

"Dick Snyder"

05/10/2005 7:12 AM

Finding compatible woods for laminating

I did an earlier post with this question which got no replies. As this group
is usually excellent at providing help, I thought my earlier subject line
might have been confusing so I will try one more time. If you read the first
post and couldn't help and are now reading this one, I apologize for posting
twice.

I would like to make a decorative tapestry hanger in the form of a dowel. I
have mahogany but I want to make a laminate with a dark wood in the center
so that I end up with a mahogany dowel with a dark stripe in
it. Can anyone recommend a resource I can use to learn what compatible dark
wood I can
glue up with mahogany so that the dowel won't split later? I'm not sure if I
should be looking at shrinkage characteristics of the two woods and if so,
just how close do the shrinkage charteristics of the mahogany and the darker
wood have to be to each other?

TIA.

Dick Snyder



This topic has 4 replies

DS

"Dick Snyder"

in reply to "Dick Snyder" on 05/10/2005 7:12 AM

05/10/2005 10:48 PM

Thanks for the suggestion. I will buy the dark wood and store in the room in
which the end product is to be finally located for a couple of weeks.
Dick Snyder


<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Wed, 5 Oct 2005 07:12:30 -0400, "Dick Snyder"
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>I did an earlier post with this question which got no replies. As this
>>group
>>is usually excellent at providing help, I thought my earlier subject line
>>might have been confusing so I will try one more time. If you read the
>>first
>>post and couldn't help and are now reading this one, I apologize for
>>posting
>>twice.
>>
>>I would like to make a decorative tapestry hanger in the form of a dowel.
>>I
>>have mahogany but I want to make a laminate with a dark wood in the center
>>so that I end up with a mahogany dowel with a dark stripe in
>>it. Can anyone recommend a resource I can use to learn what compatible
>>dark
>>wood I can
>>glue up with mahogany so that the dowel won't split later? I'm not sure if
>>I
>>should be looking at shrinkage characteristics of the two woods and if so,
>>just how close do the shrinkage charteristics of the mahogany and the
>>darker
>>wood have to be to each other?
>>
>>TIA.
>>
>>Dick Snyder
>>
>>
>
>
> mahogany is an imprecise term. there are a gajillion woods called
> mahogany, ranging from stuff the color of white pine to stuff as dark
> as black walnut. since you want a dark stripe in the middle of your
> mahogany, I'll assume you have one of the lighter varieties. those are
> generally pretty soft lauan type woods from the asian tropics.
>
> since the center dark stripe is sandwiched by 2 layers of lighter
> woods, it has balanced forces. this is a pretty forgiving arrangement.
> you can pretty much use whatever you want or can afford.
>
> the biggest thing you can do to avoid warping after glueup is store
> the woods together for a couple of weeks before you proceed.

b

in reply to "Dick Snyder" on 05/10/2005 7:12 AM

05/10/2005 5:08 PM

On Wed, 5 Oct 2005 07:12:30 -0400, "Dick Snyder"
<[email protected]> wrote:

>I did an earlier post with this question which got no replies. As this group
>is usually excellent at providing help, I thought my earlier subject line
>might have been confusing so I will try one more time. If you read the first
>post and couldn't help and are now reading this one, I apologize for posting
>twice.
>
>I would like to make a decorative tapestry hanger in the form of a dowel. I
>have mahogany but I want to make a laminate with a dark wood in the center
>so that I end up with a mahogany dowel with a dark stripe in
>it. Can anyone recommend a resource I can use to learn what compatible dark
>wood I can
>glue up with mahogany so that the dowel won't split later? I'm not sure if I
>should be looking at shrinkage characteristics of the two woods and if so,
>just how close do the shrinkage charteristics of the mahogany and the darker
>wood have to be to each other?
>
>TIA.
>
>Dick Snyder
>
>


mahogany is an imprecise term. there are a gajillion woods called
mahogany, ranging from stuff the color of white pine to stuff as dark
as black walnut. since you want a dark stripe in the middle of your
mahogany, I'll assume you have one of the lighter varieties. those are
generally pretty soft lauan type woods from the asian tropics.

since the center dark stripe is sandwiched by 2 layers of lighter
woods, it has balanced forces. this is a pretty forgiving arrangement.
you can pretty much use whatever you want or can afford.

the biggest thing you can do to avoid warping after glueup is store
the woods together for a couple of weeks before you proceed.

DS

"Dick Snyder"

in reply to "Dick Snyder" on 05/10/2005 7:12 AM

05/10/2005 11:10 PM

Screwed up my earlier post - I meant I will store both the dark wood and the
mahogany in the room where I plan to have the tapestry hanger (my living
room) for a couple of weeks.


<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Wed, 5 Oct 2005 07:12:30 -0400, "Dick Snyder"
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>I did an earlier post with this question which got no replies. As this
>>group
>>is usually excellent at providing help, I thought my earlier subject line
>>might have been confusing so I will try one more time. If you read the
>>first
>>post and couldn't help and are now reading this one, I apologize for
>>posting
>>twice.
>>
>>I would like to make a decorative tapestry hanger in the form of a dowel.
>>I
>>have mahogany but I want to make a laminate with a dark wood in the center
>>so that I end up with a mahogany dowel with a dark stripe in
>>it. Can anyone recommend a resource I can use to learn what compatible
>>dark
>>wood I can
>>glue up with mahogany so that the dowel won't split later? I'm not sure if
>>I
>>should be looking at shrinkage characteristics of the two woods and if so,
>>just how close do the shrinkage charteristics of the mahogany and the
>>darker
>>wood have to be to each other?
>>
>>TIA.
>>
>>Dick Snyder
>>
>>
>
>
> mahogany is an imprecise term. there are a gajillion woods called
> mahogany, ranging from stuff the color of white pine to stuff as dark
> as black walnut. since you want a dark stripe in the middle of your
> mahogany, I'll assume you have one of the lighter varieties. those are
> generally pretty soft lauan type woods from the asian tropics.
>
> since the center dark stripe is sandwiched by 2 layers of lighter
> woods, it has balanced forces. this is a pretty forgiving arrangement.
> you can pretty much use whatever you want or can afford.
>
> the biggest thing you can do to avoid warping after glueup is store
> the woods together for a couple of weeks before you proceed.

dd

"dadiOH"

in reply to "Dick Snyder" on 05/10/2005 7:12 AM

05/10/2005 2:11 PM

Dick Snyder wrote:
> I did an earlier post with this question which got no replies. As
> this group is usually excellent at providing help, I thought my
> earlier subject line might have been confusing so I will try one more
> time. If you read the first post and couldn't help and are now
> reading this one, I apologize for posting twice.
>
> I would like to make a decorative tapestry hanger in the form of a
> dowel. I have mahogany but I want to make a laminate with a dark wood
> in the center so that I end up with a mahogany dowel with a dark
> stripe in
> it. Can anyone recommend a resource I can use to learn what
> compatible dark wood I can
> glue up with mahogany so that the dowel won't split later? I'm not
> sure if I should be looking at shrinkage characteristics of the two
> woods and if so, just how close do the shrinkage charteristics of the
> mahogany and the darker wood have to be to each other?

Use anything and quit worrying about it...nothing is going to happen.

--
dadiOH
____________________________

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