American Woodworker
Contact Us | Help | Report a Bug
Sign in | Join
 

Quartersawn Oak Lansing MI

Quartersawn boards are rarely wide enough for a large panel, so in many cases you must glue boards together or resaw and book-match a single board. Here's a rule of thumb for resawing quartersawn oak: Look at the outside faces before you cut.

The Home Depot
(517)323-0229
936 S Waverly Rd
Lansing, MI
Johnson's Workbench
517-543-2727
563 N Cochran Ave
Charlotte, MI
Fastenal- Lansing
517-322-3066
4212 S. Creyts Rd Lansing, MI, 48917
Lansing, MI
LOWE'S OF W. LANSING, MICH.
517 622-5755
320 MARKETPLACE BLVD LANSING, MI, 48917
Lansing, MI
Fastenal- Lansing
517-482-2300
1115 South Pennsylvania Ave Lansing, MI, 48912
Lansing, MI
The Home Depot
(517)381-0650
1749 Newman Rd
Okemos, MI
PARKER LUMBER
517-543-7068
760 S. Stine Road
Charlotte, MI
The Home Depot
(517)323-0229
936 S Waverly Rd
Lansing, MI
Lowe's
(517) 622-5755
320 Marketplace Blvd.
Lansing, MI
American Eagle Superstore
517-482-3765
901 North Larch
Lansing, MI
Data Provided by:
 

Quartersawn Oak

Quartersawn Oak

3 Tips to Unlock its Beauty

by Tom Caspar

Rip Quartersawn Legs

With the right cut, you can make beautifully matching quartersawn legs from an ordinary 2-in.-thick board. The flake figure we look for in quartersawn oak comes from a tree’s ray cells, which radiate like spokes in a wheel. Mark the spot on each end of your board where a saw cut will be parallel to the rays. Cut from mark to mark. Rip quartersawn veneer from another piece of the same board and glue it on the legs’ plainsawn faces to complete the quartered look (see “Stickley-Style Chest”).


Edge a Top

On many a piece of furniture, both the top and its front edge are prominent. Unfortunately, a beautiful quartersawn top has an ordinary-looking plainsawn edge. An easy solution is to cut your own quartersawn edging from the same lumber and glue it to the top’s edge. The edging can be from 1/16 to 1/4 in. thick. Apply similar edging to drawer rails and dividers. 

Resaw a Panel

Quartersawn boards are rarely wide enough for a large panel, so in many cases you must glue boards together or resaw and book-match a single board. Here’s a rule of thumb for resawing quartersawn oak: Look at the outside faces before you cut. If both sides have strong flake figure, the inside faces will have dramatic figure, too. If one outside face has weak figure, the inside faces probably won’t be great. The best board to pick for resawing will have perpendicular growth rings (see inset photo). 


This story originally appeared in  American Woodworker September 2005, issue #116.

Source information may have changed since the original publication date.

September 2005, issue #116

Purchase this back issue.

Click here to read the rest of the article from American Woodworker