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Name That Wood!

OK smarty pants, these are all antique or vintage woods from Hudson Valley's Antique & Vintage Woods of America (no peeking at the site!) It's a Friday pop-quiz! Can you name that wood?

 
 

How did you do? Tell us in the comments!

FIRST ROW
1 Vintage American Elm, a hardwood. Unfortunately Elm tree have been ravaged by Dutch Elm disease.
2 Antique Rustic Douglas Fir, classified as a softwood but can be used for flooring. 200 years ago, Douglas Fir was the choice for flooring in the Northwest.
3 Antique Mushroom Wood, was used in mushroom farms in western New York state and Pennsylvania. The wood was cut mostly from Hemlock and Cypress trees, and was used as shelving for mushroom beds. The mushrooms would produce an enzyme that eats away the soft portion of the wood, leaving the weathered honey color.
4 Vintage Spruce, a light-colored softwood that grows along the northern Pacific Coast.
5 Vintage American Cherry

SECOND ROW
6 Antique Tobacco Barn Oak, Its name refers to its use, more than 100 years ago, as tobacco barn siding in Connecticut and in the southern U.S.
7 Antique Heart Pine, used in excess to build American factories in the late 1800s and early 1900s. Heart Pine, now scarce, only grows an inch in diameter every 30 years.
8 Vintage Old Growth Walnut, walnut was the wood of choice for 17th century cabinetmakers in Europe.

(All descriptions and wood names are taken from Antique & Vintage Woods of America)

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lumber & building supplies, hard flooring

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Comments (9)

These are lovely woods -

It might have been interesting/fun to run a series of these as quizzes that we could have posted answers to and learned our answers later...

posted by bepsf on May 1st 2009 at 1:03pm
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wow, i didn't get a single one right ahah. i spend too much time looking at the color, and not enough time thinking about its grain.

posted by kdkaboom on May 1st 2009 at 1:12pm
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Tobacco barn wood! Anyone else grow up surrounded by Connecticut's tobacco barns? If most of the barns are oak, no wonder no one can afford to restore them. (And I guess they're not as scenic as classic dairy barns.)

posted by Liana on May 1st 2009 at 1:18pm
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Don't know the answer...however, a wonderful book on this topic, with plenty of historical tidbits, is "A Reverence For Wood" By Eric Sloane. Great gift for your fave carpenter/historian.

posted by travlingal on May 1st 2009 at 2:08pm
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i failed that test miserably. i'd never even heard of mushroom wood!

posted by thegeneral on May 1st 2009 at 2:31pm
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"i'd never even heard of mushroom wood!"

That's because there's no such thing.

It's Hemlock and Cypress that was used as beds to grow mushrooms.

posted by bepsf on May 1st 2009 at 3:05pm
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Liana, I know of a few tobacco barns in CT. Surprisingly, tobacco is one of CT's biggest crops. I believe it's used primarily for cigar wrappers.

There is a complex of antique, but still working, tobacco barns visible on the approach to Bradley International Airport. And, there's an antique tobacco barn on Route 63 south of Litchfield.

posted by Doug on May 1st 2009 at 4:12pm
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Douglas Fir is still used everywhere in BC! I have Fir floors and absolutely love them.

posted by Ginna_D on May 1st 2009 at 4:14pm
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Only two. But I don't like antiques, so I might do better with new samples. (Or not!)

posted by SherryBinNH on May 2nd 2009 at 2:26pm
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