Bryan Tyler Nelson
    
 HONDURAN ROSEWOOD BURL
  Honduran Rosewood - (Dalbergia stevensonii) Other names are Nogaed, Rosul, Honduran Rosewood. The lighter colored sapwood is sharply demarcated from the darker heartwood. Honduran Rosewood heartwood is described as pinkish brown or purplish with darker and lighter bands. The combination of colors and streaks gives the wood a very attractive appearance. The grain is typically straight. Texture is medium to fine. The wood has low to medium luster. Odor when freshly cut, the bark and sapwood have a characteristic odor similar to that of stored apples. Weight varies from about 58 lbs to 68 lbs per cu. ft. Uses range from fingerboards for banjos, guitars and mandolins, percussion bars for xylophones, harp bodies, mouldings, picture frames, sculpture, furniture and decorative veneer. Widely used for turning.
Honduran Rosewood is from Guatemala through Honduras, Panama and down to Columbia.

The burl of this wood is so fantastic I decided to give it it's own page!
 
Click image to enlarge.











The above two bowls show the difference between Honduran Rosewood, "plain" and burl.


 

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