Woodworking (rec.woodworking) Discussion forum covering all aspects of working with wood. All levels of expertise are encouraged to particiapte.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
calberto22
 
Posts: n/a
Default Color of Brazilian Cherry (Jatoba)

Hi, I just purchased a 10 year old house with beautiful dark
brown/reddish Brazilian cherry floors. Unfortunately part of the
floors were damaged by a leak and I have to replace them. I have
looked EVERYWHERE for Brazilian Cherry of the same color but they are
all a much much lighter shade. Everyone has assured me that they will
darken in about 4-6 months. However, I just can't believe a wood can
possibly change so much in color. The new Brazilian cherry I am
finding is a light brown color, my house Brazilian Cherry is a Dark
Red/Brown color. It would have to change dramatically. Everyone I
speak to at every reseller I go to tells me the same thing, IT WILL
CHANGE to a dark red/brown color and blend with the rest of the house.


Has anyone had experience with this?

Thanks,

Carlos

  #2   Report Post  
Charlie Self
 
Posts: n/a
Default

The Brazilian cherry will darken considerably, as does American black
cherry. Whether or not it will blend with the rest of your house's
flooring is less of a certainty. It should come much closer in a year
or so--I seriously doubt 6 months. Much depends on the amount of
sunlight hitting the wood. If it's in a closet, or protected from light
otherwise, the changes will take longer.

A lot of woods change color dramatically over their lifetimes if left
unstained. Black cherry is one of the most remarkable; walnut lightens
(cherry and walnut tend to pass each other during the changes).

And, of course, to the unthinkable: wood can also be stained to match
existing wood.

  #3   Report Post  
Gary A in KC
 
Posts: n/a
Default

I made a coffee table from Brazilian cherry a year ago. I'm very pleasantly
surprised with the color it has turned in that year. I also have a good
comparison because of a chess board that sits on its lower shelf (which has
prevented that portion of the shelf from changing in color).
Table has gone form a nice nutty brown to a deeper reddish brown that blends
in nicely with all the cherry built in cabinets in the living room.
If you want to accelerate the color change, get your boards ready for
installation, then leave them outside in the sun for a few afternoons. The
oxidation process that changes the wood color will start quickly and you'll
be that much closer to the final color tone you're seeking.

Gary in KC

"calberto22" wrote in message
oups.com...
Hi, I just purchased a 10 year old house with beautiful dark
brown/reddish Brazilian cherry floors. Unfortunately part of the
floors were damaged by a leak and I have to replace them. I have
looked EVERYWHERE for Brazilian Cherry of the same color but they are
all a much much lighter shade. Everyone has assured me that they will
darken in about 4-6 months. However, I just can't believe a wood can
possibly change so much in color. The new Brazilian cherry I am
finding is a light brown color, my house Brazilian Cherry is a Dark
Red/Brown color. It would have to change dramatically. Everyone I
speak to at every reseller I go to tells me the same thing, IT WILL
CHANGE to a dark red/brown color and blend with the rest of the house.


Has anyone had experience with this?

Thanks,

Carlos



  #4   Report Post  
bkr
 
Posts: n/a
Default

calberto22 wrote:

Hi, I just purchased a 10 year old house with beautiful dark
brown/reddish Brazilian cherry floors. Unfortunately part of the
floors were damaged by a leak and I have to replace them. I have
looked EVERYWHERE for Brazilian Cherry of the same color but they are
all a much much lighter shade. Everyone has assured me that they will
darken in about 4-6 months. However, I just can't believe a wood can
possibly change so much in color. The new Brazilian cherry I am
finding is a light brown color, my house Brazilian Cherry is a Dark
Red/Brown color. It would have to change dramatically. Everyone I
speak to at every reseller I go to tells me the same thing, IT WILL
CHANGE to a dark red/brown color and blend with the rest of the house.


Has anyone had experience with this?

Thanks,

Carlos

Carlos, my experience is somewhat limited, but I used to work for a
furniture store and Cherry always gets darker. In fact most of the red
woods (Cherry, Mahogany, Padauk, etc) all get darker over time. Most
also get darker more quickly in areas of high exposure to sunlight as well.

bkr
  #5   Report Post  
Dan Oelke
 
Posts: n/a
Default

calberto22 wrote:
Hi, I just purchased a 10 year old house with beautiful dark
brown/reddish Brazilian cherry floors. Unfortunately part of the
floors were damaged by a leak and I have to replace them. I have
looked EVERYWHERE for Brazilian Cherry of the same color but they are
all a much much lighter shade. Everyone has assured me that they will
darken in about 4-6 months. However, I just can't believe a wood can
possibly change so much in color. The new Brazilian cherry I am
finding is a light brown color, my house Brazilian Cherry is a Dark
Red/Brown color. It would have to change dramatically. Everyone I
speak to at every reseller I go to tells me the same thing, IT WILL
CHANGE to a dark red/brown color and blend with the rest of the house.


Has anyone had experience with this?

Thanks,

Carlos


I have never tried this personally - but you might want to Google
putting your cherry in an tanning booth. I know that has come up before
and from what I remember the UV does enhance the aging process some but
there is some oxidation going on as well which just takes time.
Thinking out loud - maybe ozone would quicken the oxidation process -
but you have to be careful when dealing with that stuff.

In any case buy some stock and let it age for 6 months. If the color is
close enough for you at that point then install it. You have to put up
with the leak stain for 6 months, but it should be less ugly than the
dramatically different colored wood, and if it doesn't age to a close
enough color then you don't have to do the repair twice.

Good luck!
Dan


  #6   Report Post  
patrick conroy
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"calberto22" wrote in message
oups.com...



Has anyone had experience with this?


Yeah - the jatoba stuff I've done has darkened nicely. Maybe not 4-6 months,
maybe closer to 12.


  #7   Report Post  
Edwin Pawlowski
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"calberto22" wrote in message

. Everyone has assured me that they will
darken in about 4-6 months. However, I just can't believe a wood can
possibly change so much in color. The new Brazilian cherry I am
finding is a light brown color, my house Brazilian Cherry is a Dark
Red/Brown color. It would have to change dramatically. Everyone I
speak to at every reseller I go to tells me the same thing, IT WILL
CHANGE to a dark red/brown color and blend with the rest of the house.


They are all a bunch of liars that just want to take your money. Fact is,
the wood will lighten as the sunlight bleaches it and in six months is will
look about the same as a pine board.

What gets me is that everyone in the wood business gave you the same sad
tale. they probably belong to a trade association that comes up with stories
to tell customers. What a farce that they would try to come off as experts
and tell you fantasy stories. Sorry to be the only honest person here and
tell you that, but one of us must show they have upstanding character and
truthful. That would be me.


  #8   Report Post  
rmc
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Thu, 03 Mar 2005 21:32:34 +0000, Edwin Pawlowski wrote:


"calberto22" wrote in message

. Everyone has assured me that they will darken in about 4-6 months.
However, I just can't believe a wood can possibly change so much in
color. The new Brazilian cherry I am finding is a light brown color, my
house Brazilian Cherry is a Dark Red/Brown color. It would have to
change dramatically. Everyone I speak to at every reseller I go to
tells me the same thing, IT WILL CHANGE to a dark red/brown color and
blend with the rest of the house.


They are all a bunch of liars that just want to take your money. Fact is,
the wood will lighten as the sunlight bleaches it and in six months is
will look about the same as a pine board.

What gets me is that everyone in the wood business gave you the same sad
tale. they probably belong to a trade association that comes up with
stories to tell customers. What a farce that they would try to come off
as experts and tell you fantasy stories. Sorry to be the only honest
person here and tell you that, but one of us must show they have
upstanding character and truthful. That would be me.



Well I'll be damned!!! The sun does the same thing to wood as it does to
women. The older they get the lighter their hair gets. Until it finally turns blue.


  #9   Report Post  
Tom Watson
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On 2 Mar 2005 20:58:34 -0800, "calberto22"
wrote:

Hi, I just purchased a 10 year old house with beautiful dark
brown/reddish Brazilian cherry floors. Unfortunately part of the
floors were damaged by a leak and I have to replace them. I have
looked EVERYWHERE for Brazilian Cherry of the same color but they are
all a much much lighter shade. Everyone has assured me that they will
darken in about 4-6 months. However, I just can't believe a wood can
possibly change so much in color. The new Brazilian cherry I am
finding is a light brown color, my house Brazilian Cherry is a Dark
Red/Brown color. It would have to change dramatically. Everyone I
speak to at every reseller I go to tells me the same thing, IT WILL
CHANGE to a dark red/brown color and blend with the rest of the house.


Has anyone had experience with this?

Thanks,

Carlos



The problem with what is called, "Brazilian Cherry", is that it is a
trade name, rather than the fruits of Linnaeus Naema.

As a trade name, it can include many different, some would say - far
too many different - subspecies in its grouping.

I built a set of stairs out of what was called, "Brazilian Cherry",
and it looked like this:

http://home.comcast.net/~tjwatson1/page21.htm

These pictures were taken after a wash coat had been applied.

Brazilian Cherry is closer to being a Mahogany than it is to being a
Cherry.

It certainly is not related to the American hardwood that we call
Cherry.

I did not find it to be particularly responsive to the darkening
effects of light, in an immediate sense, as American Cherry is.
When the boards are brought out of the stack, they darken without
exposure to UV, leading one to believe that the oxidation process is
air driven, rather than UV driven.

It is very tough and fibrous, and, in my experience, has many
inclusions of minerals that defeat tools that are not sufficiently
hardened.

I did not particularly enjoy working with this wood. I found it to
take a poor finish, in terms of reflectivity, and as opposed to
American cherry.



Thomas J. Watson - WoodDorker

tjwatson1ATcomcastDOTnet (real email)
http://home.comcast.net/~tjwatson1 (webpage)
  #10   Report Post  
Rick Cook
 
Posts: n/a
Default

calberto22 wrote:
Hi, I just purchased a 10 year old house with beautiful dark
brown/reddish Brazilian cherry floors. Unfortunately part of the
floors were damaged by a leak and I have to replace them. I have
looked EVERYWHERE for Brazilian Cherry of the same color but they are
all a much much lighter shade. Everyone has assured me that they will
darken in about 4-6 months. However, I just can't believe a wood can
possibly change so much in color.


Believe it.
I have some Brazilian Cherry pieces, including handles of woodcarving
knives, that have darkened considerable in the course of a few months to
a couple of years.

Still gorgeous stuff.


--RC


  #11   Report Post  
max
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Carlos
Where you in Woodcraft in San Carlos this afternoon?
max

calberto22 wrote:
Hi, I just purchased a 10 year old house with beautiful dark
brown/reddish Brazilian cherry floors. Unfortunately part of the
floors were damaged by a leak and I have to replace them. I have
looked EVERYWHERE for Brazilian Cherry of the same color but they are
all a much much lighter shade. Everyone has assured me that they will
darken in about 4-6 months. However, I just can't believe a wood can
possibly change so much in color. The new Brazilian cherry I am
finding is a light brown color, my house Brazilian Cherry is a Dark
Red/Brown color. It would have to change dramatically. Everyone I
speak to at every reseller I go to tells me the same thing, IT WILL
CHANGE to a dark red/brown color and blend with the rest of the house.


Has anyone had experience with this?

Thanks,

Carlos


I have never tried this personally - but you might want to Google
putting your cherry in an tanning booth. I know that has come up before
and from what I remember the UV does enhance the aging process some but
there is some oxidation going on as well which just takes time.
Thinking out loud - maybe ozone would quicken the oxidation process -
but you have to be careful when dealing with that stuff.

In any case buy some stock and let it age for 6 months. If the color is
close enough for you at that point then install it. You have to put up
with the leak stain for 6 months, but it should be less ugly than the
dramatically different colored wood, and if it doesn't age to a close
enough color then you don't have to do the repair twice.

Good luck!
Dan


  #12   Report Post  
Mark
 
Posts: n/a
Default

It will.
Jatoba is a favorite of mine...made many pieces using it.
I prefer it over American cherry... more consistent straighter grain, more
consistent cheaper prices, etc.
Matter of fact, I have a stash of the flooring.
Not enough to do a whole room.
Mark

"calberto22" wrote in message
oups.com...
Hi, I just purchased a 10 year old house with beautiful dark
brown/reddish Brazilian cherry floors. Unfortunately part of the
floors were damaged by a leak and I have to replace them. I have
looked EVERYWHERE for Brazilian Cherry of the same color but they are
all a much much lighter shade. Everyone has assured me that they will
darken in about 4-6 months. However, I just can't believe a wood can
possibly change so much in color. The new Brazilian cherry I am
finding is a light brown color, my house Brazilian Cherry is a Dark
Red/Brown color. It would have to change dramatically. Everyone I
speak to at every reseller I go to tells me the same thing, IT WILL
CHANGE to a dark red/brown color and blend with the rest of the house.


Has anyone had experience with this?

Thanks,

Carlos



Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Painting Cherry, HELP CurtisJon Woodworking 12 February 28th 05 05:23 PM
Cost of Cherry Jerry Woodworking 57 February 21st 05 06:28 PM
Cherry Firewood toller Woodworking 2 December 29th 04 03:56 PM
Fuming Cherry? Dave Jackson Woodworking 4 November 28th 04 09:44 AM
Advice needed on Cherry table top Jerry Woodworking 7 March 26th 04 05:28 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:29 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 DIYbanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about DIY & home improvement"