Tips
on Buying Wood Furniture
From
Ready-to-finish
furniture gives you a wide range of options that can meet all your furniture
needs. Pop's Furniture offers quality products from both local craftsmen
and national manufacturers that will fit any budget.
Wood
Definitions:
Solid Wood
means that all exposed parts of the furniture are made of solid board,
either softwood or hardwood lumber. No veneers or particle boards are
used. When solid boards are used in furniture construction, they are
glued together side by side along the edges. Often, a number of boards
are used to make the wood more stable and reduce the chance of warping.
By following a seam to the end you can always identify solid board,
where you will find the "end" grain. Many veneers are glued
over the edges to look like solid wood, but they will always be faced
on the end and show no end grain.
Remember,
"all-wood furniture" is not necessarily solid wood. A veneer
can help you achieve the look you desire at a cost lower than solid
lumber.
Artificial
veneers can be overlaid on plywood or particleboard. A plywood core
is lighter, less expensive and more forgiving if damaged, but it can
swell if it gets wet. If damaged, particleboard will often fracture
because the material is so hard it cannot absorb a shock.
There are
three types of glue-up in most solid wood furniture:
Veneer
is a thin layer of wood applied in sheets over underlying layers of
wood, plywood or particleboard. Plywood is made of thin layers of solid
wood glued over each other with grains running at 90-degree angles to
produce a strong core. A "real wood" veneer is often glued
on top.
Gluing chips
and particles of wood together and pressing them into sheets, upon which
a veneer can be glued, makes particleboard. The specific density of
the wood determines hardness, not by whether a tree is classified as
a "hardwood" or "softwood." Hardwoods come from
deciduous trees. (e.g. maple, oak, alder)
Softwoods
come from conifers. (e.g. pine, spruce, fir) Some hardwoods, such as
balsa wood, are softer than some softwoods, such as pine.
Tips:
Drawer construction
is generally a good indication of overall furniture quality. Some drawers
have no guides. The lack of guides allows more "play" and
can cause the drawer to bind when it is opened and closed. Others have
wood-to-wood center guides, nylon-to-wood center guides, side-mounted
roller guides or center-mounted metal guides. Roller guides and center-mounted
metal guides normally have built-in drawer stops, and some have lifetime
warranties for drawer operation.
Many drawers
have glue-blocks to strengthen the bottom. Most ready-to-finish chests
have wood drawer bottoms not always the case with prefinished furniture.
Now, as in the past, doweled and dovetailed drawer joints indicate a
high degree of craftsmanship. However, modern machine technology, good
bonding glue and pneumatically driven staples coated with resin have
afforded savings in construction while providing durability.
The quality
wood furniture you purchase today can be used for a lifetime. There
are many benefits you'll find in Solid Wood furniture. For a selection
of solid wood furniture and more information on buying wood furniture
visit
.