kitchen cabinets - 1/4 sawn white oak with a black rubbing stain is what I saw and loved. Would red oak work?

bibliobethica asked:


This is for our lower cabinets and drawers in our new kitchen. The cabinet guy wants us to use red oak rather than white. We asked for a sample from him. Has anyone seen the red oak stained black? What do you experienced woodworkers think?

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This entry was posted on Sunday, March 15th, 2009 at 11:45 pm and is filed under Kitchen Cabinetry. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

3 Responses to “kitchen cabinets - 1/4 sawn white oak with a black rubbing stain is what I saw and loved. Would red oak work?”

  1. R P A Says:

    Quarter sawn white oak will have medullary ray fleck that will not be apparent in red oak. Red oak is not a bad wood but don’t expect it to look the same. Quarter sawn white oak was a favorite of the arts and craft movement. Take a look at the mission style furniture from Stickley to get an idea why it was and is so popular.

    You will pay significantly more for quarter sawn white oak. Here in New England it’s about twice as expensive as flat sawn red oak and sometimes hard to find.

    Wait for the sample!

  2. Nishi Says:

    RPA is right, you will not get the same results from red oak. The 1/4 sawn white oak is definately the way to go. I have built lots of furniture out of both and both work fine. However, the look of the 1/4 sawn white oak way surpasses the red oak. Stay true to what you originally asked for and if the carpenter can’t do it…Find a different carpenter. Good luck.

  3. edkerns1 Says:

    I’m only weighing in to say that RPA nailed your answer. He is exactly right. In addition, any carpenter who would suggest red oak to replace QSWO is a bit suspect. Keep in mind the ‘quarter sawn’ description. It is that specifically that makes the appearance so unique (and pricey)

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