🌟 Elevate Your Craft with Walnut Elegance!
This Walnut Thin Sawn Lumber Board Blank measures 1/8" x 3.25" x 18" and is made from prime black walnut. It is perfectly kiln dried and sanded on two faces, making it an ideal choice for woodworking projects that require both beauty and durability.
C**S
Very nice wood
This wood is nice. It looks like the pairs of wood pieces were resawn from one piece. So I have pairs of bookmarked pieces. The wood is mostly heartwood, very little sapwood. A couple pieces are pretty rough and will be hard to plane smooth but overall I think this was worth the money
D**N
Exactly as advertised, good product
I ordered 10 walnut boards measuring 1/8” by 3” by 18”. I got 11 walnut boards measuring exactly 1/8” thick, exactly 3” wide, and a little over 18” long. And eight of them were from the exact same piece of wood, so they were all identical grain. The finish is rough sanded, but uniform and free of defects. Overall, I am very satisfied with my order. It was exactly what I ordered. The packaging was solid. Nothing too fancy, but enough layers of cardboard and tape that it was well protected. I highly recommend this. I’m planning on using these to outline some white oak cabinet doors for a little more pop.
R**S
Fantastic
My fiancé and I bought these wood panels to build a new counter top with over our existing one. They were exactly as described. The coloring of the four boxes we bought were all similar or with in a shade of each other. They were easy to work with and cut. We only had one splinter when cutting, but otherwise was fine. They took stain very well as well as the epoxy.I would recommend for any type of project.
K**R
Tie rack grains were lovely
Nice wood grains, I oiled the wood to highlight the grainsI made a custom tie rack Still Waiting now for it to dry so I can put my ties in.Some were a bit bowed and many had the cut marks from the band saw that were a bit difficult to sand out with it being such a thin piece of wood. I would have given it 5 stars had there not been the thick saw blade marks
S**Y
Perfect countertop
The media could not be loaded. Used these to overlay the existing formica and create a faux butcher block look. The planks shipped quickly, had nice variation in tone and grain, cut like a dream and have produced an amazing end result. Love!
A**R
Beautiful
I used these boards to remake my guest bath countertop. Beautiful to cut and work with. Used some liquid nail to secure and sealed with Rubio Monocoat.There was a slight variance in the thicknesses but for my purposes it didn't affect my project. I went through every board and separated them based on thickness and holes from knots. All the ones with holes were used as my shorter pieces and the thickest ones were used as the "backslash" and facing. Not a bit of waste for my project.100% would buy again, in fact, I'm anxious to make something else with a new order.
D**D
Save your money!
I tried to glue these down like a video I had watched and every single one of these boards cupped. I ripped them up and tried it again, putting a large board on top of it with 200lbs of weight on it, and still again they all cupped. This is a huge waste of money!
C**E
They will cup wtihout weight on them as they dry, don't use on a countertop.
I saw a tik tok.... I know I know. So the woman used liquid nails to glue these down on her countertop and voila, butcher block countertops. My kitchen is old (I'm not yet ready to do a remodel) and I DIY things, I had done the featherlight concrete finish a few years ago, so it was about time to try something else to polish the turd as they say. Yes, it can be done, but let me just warn you it's a nightmare. I attempted to use the liquid nails (the most adhesive kind) on top of my concrete finish, they immediately started to cup (the edges curling up). I had to scrape them all off.I went back and screwed plywood onto my countertop. Then I used wood glue, a thin even coat on the plywood and each piece of walnut thin planking. I then put weights on each end of the plank piece. Yes each end, I tried clamping wood onto it to do a larger section but the glue seeped up, even the thin layer and then stuck to the wood. Sigh. So I did small sections each day, weighing the ends down with weights, water jugs, etc. I filled in each gap with walnut color wood filler (do not get the yellowish light kind). Sanded frequently. I then used Danish oil to stain the counter. Now keep in mind you are going to have to cut these because your project will not be exactly the width of the boards you use, and it splinters very easily. You also cannot screw into it or nail it, again splinters. So it's glue or nothing and not too much or again, warping. If you cut the pieces shorter there will be less warping but these aren't long to begin with.After staining I put a food-safe polyurethane coating on top, then 3 more. It looks nice but I wouldn't do it again. It would be worth it just to get a good wood, and draw lines like planks with pencil, stain, and topcoat. Nobody's gonna know.Don't do it for countertops. I'm sure it's lovely for other products. It takes the stain well and is a nice wood.
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