34
When you hear "Solid wood", how do you interpret that?
(lemmy.world)
A handmade home for woodworkers and admirers of woodworkers. Our community icon is a planter box made by @Captain Aggravated, the winner of our summer '24 woodworking contest. Congratulations!
I get the idea, but that was an honest answer. I usually refer to specific materials when working on a project, not a term to group a bunch of them. Either way works tho.
But if you would like to know my preference, the name of the tree translates to "european spruce" according to wikipedia. It's because it's readily available here, and usable inside and outside without a lot of extra treatment
Yeah, when I build stuff, I always just say the timber it's made out of, but I was talking with someone about an old dresser. They mentioned it was "solid wood", but the case was made out of an old press board. Which led to this question. I wanted to make sure I wasn't confused.
Ahh, context! Then I would probably think of oak, just because that's what the few old dressers I've seen are made of. Although I would want to double check
Sounds like the person you were talking to may have been the confused one. (In all fairness, if they have no great interest in wood, woodworking, or furniture, they don't really need to know that engineered sheet goods don't count as solid wood.)