The client looked
into my eyes with an expression I had seen any number
of times before – sort of a mixture of puzzlement
and concern – almost bordering on complete dismay.
What could have caused her such anxiety you wonder.
No, it wasn’t my bill, but the realization that
the custom furniture I had designed and installed in
her husband’s executive office – the furniture
she had only a short while ago so loved and praised
- was not made of solid wood – but veneer! I then
had to explain to her, as I’ve done numerous times
before with clients, the pros and cons of using one
or the other.
There are still too
many of us that believe that solid wood is better than
veneer when it comes to furniture. Today more than ever
before this idea couldn’t be further from the
truth. Veneers offer any number of advantages over solid
woods and are the preferred materials of many of the
finest furniture manufacturers. But nowadays furniture
is most often a combination of solid woods and veneers
as is the case with most of the pieces that I design
and manufacture such as my client’s executive
office.
The solid woods give
much needed strength to edges, legs and aprons and other
supporting components of a piece of furniture. No substitutes
can compare to solid hardwoods when it comes to holding
nails and screws and withstanding the stresses, loads,
shocks and abrasions of daily use. Additionally, solid
woods can usually be easily repaired and/or refinished.
But for areas such
the sides of desks and entertainment centers where solid
woods would likely crack and warp (which can often be
the case when wood inherently expands and contracts
due to fluctuations in humidity) a veneer is usually
glued to the top and sides over a solid substrate such
as plywood or MDF (medium density fiberboard). And this
is a good thing as both of these materials are extremely
strong and stable and bonded under high pressure for
utmost durability and resistance to warping.
So just what is a
wood veneer? Well, first and foremost it truly is real
wood from real trees that have been finely sliced and
then most often applied to the stable substrates just
mentioned. Furniture makers use veneers because it allows
them greater freedom with their designs than they could
ever achieve working only with solid woods while at
the same time making the finished piece more stable
and even more cost effective to produce. They come from
two basic sources of wood – trees that are available
in solid stock as well as the exotic trees where solid
stock is now almost impossible to find.
Veneers are the
best way to achieve the craftsman’s vision of
beauty for a piece of furniture and only the finest
of the woods are saved to be veneers. The clever Egyptians
knew this over 3500 years ago when the process was first
used. Furniture covered with precious and exotic woods
eventually became a highly prized art that called for
artisans with great training and experience which holds
true today; though with the advances in technology there
really is very little chance for anything in the veneering
process to actually go awry.
Yes, it’s been
known for centuries that the only way to really achieve
perfectly grain-matched and uniformly colored areas
on a larger piece of furniture is to cut veneers from
a single tree because as the saying goes, “no
two trees are alike” is really true. To create
the same effect with solid woods is far more difficult
and costly. Exotic woods such as burls for example are
comparatively small pieces and can be expanded into
color and pattern-matched surfaces only by being sliced
into veneers to create the necessary larger areas. This
is often referred to as a “book-matched”
pattern. (See illustrations.)
Add to the wisdom
of using wood veneers the concept of sustainability
and “green design” so much on peoples’
minds these days and you too will no longer question
the merits of veneer versus solid woods. If we can be
environmentally kind (producing over 42 surfaces of
wood veneer for every 1 of solid wood – and with
no wood even wasted as sawdust!) while at the same time
creating something of lasting beauty, then we have indeed
achieved a rare and perfect balance.
ILLUSTRATIONS INCLUDED:
Brazilian Rosewood
Dining Table: book-matched (Soleil Design Intl. Inc.)
Brazilian Rosewood Buffet with Black Granite Top: book-matched
(Soleil Design Intl.)
Olive Ash Burl Wood Wall Unit: book-matched (Soleil
Design Intl. Inc.)