V025 – BIRCH VENEER

Greater importance as rotary birch for the furniture and panel industry (popular wood for bedrooms in the 1950s); and table and chair production. Very popular firewood. In larger dimensions (rarely) also produced as knife birch. The majority of the knife-cut birch is "yellow birch" from the USA.

V028 – AFRICAN TEAK

African Teak Veneer is highly durable, with excellent resistance to decay and insect attacks, including termites. It is known for its stability and strength, making it suitable for both indoor and outdoor use.

V029 – KOTO VENEER

Veneer wood, sliced ​​wood for face and interior veneers, and rotary cut wood for plywood panels. Used more as interior veneer in the furniture industry.

V030 – MAPLE BURL

Highly decorative elements such as fillings or fronts in interior design and furniture construction. Maple burl often has bark intrusions, and healthy, large-area tubers are extremely rare and very expensive. They are practically always fully grained.

V031 – PINE CROWN

Most common species of tree in the world. Its subspecies are found from the Arctic Circle to the mountain regions in the tropics. The most used species for the production of veneer in central Europe are the common pine and in southern Europe the maritime pine.

V032 – BEECH BACKING

Veneer wood has large dimensions compared to other European woods (60 cm diameter and more), furniture and parquet wood, chipboard, excellent bending wood (seating furniture), well suited for workbenches, good construction wood. One of the most common woods in Europe is produced as a veneer in steamed, white, and old white. Since the mid-1990s, beech has been a distinctly fashionable wood in the veneer and solid wood sector.

V033 – LACEWOOD

Has a very conspicuous flecking that gives this wood its namesake. The wood itself is a reddish brown with grey or light brown rays, which result in a lace pattern when quartersawn. Like other woods that exhibit the strongest figure in quartersawn pieces, (such as Sycamore), Lacewood has the most pronounced figure and displays the largest flecks when perfectly quartersawn; this is due to the wood’s wide medullary rays, whose layout can be seen the clearest when looking at the end grain.

V034 – EUCALYPTUS

In its simple form – cf. Eucalyptus Pommele, Eucalyptus Riegel – it is rarely used as a front veneer, mostly as a side and interior veneer, because the wood is not very expressive. In addition to veneer production, eucalyptus is used for ship and vehicle construction, for railway sleepers, and as plantation wood, mainly for paper production.

V035 – TULIP

Sliced ​​and peeled wood, is used almost exclusively for indoor purposes as it is extremely susceptible to weathering. In southern Europe, it is also sometimes used as a veneer for series furniture production in the lower price segment.

V039 – FIGURED SYCAMORE VENEER QUARTER

Used as veneer, plywood, interior trim, pallets/crates, flooring, furniture, particleboard, paper (pulpwood), tool handles, and other turned objects.

V041 – FIGURED MAKORE VENEER

The machining is carried out without any difficulties, but due to the reluctance of the chips, the feed rate should be kept low. Furthermore, the tool-cutting edges quickly become blunt due to silicon deposits.

V042 – ANIGRE

Veneer wood is mostly used as interior veneer in Central Europe; if used as front veneer, then as cherry substitute wood. In Southern Europe more often used as a front veneer for series furniture. Also used in North America for high-quality interior design purposes, but mostly in the planned form. Special wood for printing and dyeing. In Italy, Spain, and Greece, walnut sapwood substitutes for wood. Also used for the production of fineline veneers.