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![]() the retail store of OAKLEY WOODS CROQUET
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PURPLE HEART
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Purpleheart’s color change is remarkable to behold, says Greg Engle, sales manager for Certainly Wood of East Aurora, NY. “When you first see it, it’s almost a mousy gray-brown color, but when it’s cut, it turns a brilliant purple. It will ‘mature’ and age to a deeper, crimson color.” Engle cautions users to protect it from ultraviolet rays because the wood is photosensitive. Engle suggests protecting the color by adding a UV inhibitor to the finish if the purpleheart will be anywhere near light. “The good news is you can bring the finish back if there is any damage by sanding or recutting the wood,” he adds. Engle says purpleheart has consistently been a popular item with his veneer customers. Engle says users typically make fine custom furniture with the purpleheart veneer or use it in marquetry. “Purpleheart is a popular wood in both veneer and lumber. I guess it is the color and pleasing luster of the wood that attracts attention. It is not used on the scale of a mahogany, but it always generates interest,” Engle says. The wood has a long list of uses. “It makes a very good accent wood teamed with woods like maple. It works nicely as flooring, either in parquet or used as an accent wood inlaid to create a design. It is a very popular decorative wood in the United States and in the countries where it grows, it has a long list of uses that are both decorative and utilitarian,” Engle adds. At
Home in the Tropics Purpleheart trees can grow as tall as 170 feet with diameters as wide as 4 feet, but most are between 125 and 150 feet. Typically the trees feature buttresses up to 12 feet and straight, cylindrical boles clear 60 to 90 feet. Purpleheart is exported around the world as fine veneer and lumber. It is used for inlay, parquet and traditional flooring, overlay, architectural uses and fine furniture as well as for turnery and specialty items such as art objects, jewelry, picture frames and silverware handles. In the countries where it grows, the hard and heavy wood is also used for more utilitarian purposes due to its innate strength and unique properties. Purpleheart’s unique color is also a big draw. Custom cabinetry and furniture maker Bill Hergenroeder, owner of Springwood Construction Inc. in Cockeysville, MD, uses purpleheart for inlay and marquetry as well as specialty items like picture frames. “I buy it in the solid form for the picture frames. It’s a popular color for that use. If I make 40 frames of various woods, the purpleheart frames always seem to be the first to sell.” Hergenroeder says purpleheart is a fine tropical wood, attractive, hard and dense. “The color change is very dramatic when you first cut it and it’s exposed.” |
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| By Jo-Ann Kaiser ~ Vance Publishing | |||
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