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C**X
Helpful and informative book, high quality
I found this to be a very informative subject that should give me some added insight into my woodworking hobbies and interests. Lots of great information, beautiful and detailed pictures. Plus, the physical book itself is very well made. It feels sturdy and should hold up well over the years. I think it is only made is small production batches so if you are interested and it is available, don't wait too long. I missed it a couple times before I managed to get one.
P**S
Excellent new book about wood
Eric Meier, who owns/runs The Wood Database web site has now published a really good wood book, called "Wood! Identifying and Using Hundreds of Woods Worldwide".It’s better than most of the other reference books I have. The introductory chapters about wood structure, etc, are REALLY good. He’s clearly put a lot of time, research, and thought into this and it shows. No book with just introductory chapters on wood characteristics will ever rival Hoadley’s “Understanding Wood”, but Eric's is better than most such sets of introductory chapters and it might be the best around. I haven’t read enough detail yet to be sure.Another bit of good news is that he covers a lot of woods. I haven't counted them but the "Hundreds" in the title is not an exaggeration.Like all books, its biggest drawback in being helpful for wood ID is that it has only one picture of each wood. As we all know, most woods don't really have a "representative" look that would help ID every piece of that wood. That's why my site has LOTS of pics of each wood.Eric chose to use a full size image, so it is of necessity of a very modest sized area (about 4" square) of each sample. The good news about this is that it shows the graininess of the face quite well. The bad news is that it's too close up to give a good feel for what the a plank of the wood actually looks like. Eric has also included a picture for most of the more common woods of an object made using the wood, which helps.His choice of pieces of each wood to photograph is good, his photography is excellent, and the color plates are good but do suffer pretty severely from the problem of darkening. I corresponded w/ Eric about this and he is frustrated by it. His original images were quite good and in the proof copy he approved they looked good on the page, but when they were printed on glossy paper, there was a lot of darkening. The affect of this on the accuracy of the wood color varies, but it's a problem in all such books.A further advantage of this book is that Eric has images of, and discussions of, the end grain closeups that can be so important in doing wood identification. Sadly, the darkening of the pics is the worst on some of these, compounded by a loss of contrast/detail, to the point of making them not very useful. The end grain pics on his site are much better.Like most such references that have end grain pics (the few that HAVE end grain pics) it suffers from the fact that it's not much help in identifying a wood unless you have a pretty good guess about what wood it is, or at least can narrow it down to a small number of possibilities. That's why on my site's anatomy pages I categorize the end grain pics so that you can use the characteristics of an unknown wood to target the search (for example, ring porous -> large rays -> parencyhama characteristics -> etc.). Hoadley has a decision tree that helps do the same thing.Anyway, I consider this a great addition to my bookshelf. Eric said it took him 6 years to get it done and I believe it. It was time well spent. There's more good stuff I could go on about, but buy one and you'll see what I mean :smile:
R**Y
Love this book!
Wood! is a well-written, much-researched book. Who would have thought there was so much information on wood and trees!
K**M
Impressive & thorough
This is very useful on learning about different woods. It came in very handy in determining which species of mahogany and mahogany-like species I would use for a special project.
G**N
Useful wood information and beautiful photographs, but . . .
Useful wood information and beautiful photographs, but the author's tone in his introduction started the book on a sour note. Too, the gratuitous references to Jesus sprinkled throughout the book, from the dedication onwards, I found off-putting and unwelcome. I dislike being proselytized generally, and I especially dislike discovering I've paid money for the privilege.
M**B
Great resource!
I enjoy making custom musical instruments and music boxes.I like how the book shows the wood unfinished AND finished. I also like the information about the wood. It's all useful information that helps me decide what wood I want to use for projects. My Mom and Dad like it, too!A very practical book that is very helpful! Thank you!
B**Y
Very nice!
I read a few of the reviews that were bad, but I think they had different expectations for this book. It is a reference book for a large number of woods used in wood working. I would have perhaps used only Alphabetical order or perhaps a hardness scale going from the softest wood to the hardest but they did it another way and frankly it works.I think the layout of the book is fantastic, I think the color pictures , the information and layout is all VERY good. If your new to wood working and don't know of all the different types of wood and what it looks like this book is amazing. It has no adds, and can be taken with you. Sure I look like a noob in my lumbar yard comparing woods to this book but frankly I don't care. I can get an idea of what I'm going to be able to do with it by comparing it to other woods I know, which is why I think the hardness is the most important, but that's just me and I am new and am likely wrong ...Still this book, A++++ fantastic book
A**E
Great for beginners and experts alike
I have a good bit of expertise, been doing fine woodworking for about 15 years, but I still learned from this book. But it’s also written in such a way that a beginner could grasp all the things that they really need to know before they get started. And of course all the data on all the various wood species in the second part of the book is an incredible resource.
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