Ahoy hoy.
Ridiculous really, but I really don't know much about wood. I'm comfortable with my imported African MDF and the artisan sourced plywood sheets, so apologies in advance for the basic questions, the guaranteed misuse of terminology and probable misunderstanding of any responses I receive.
About to consider ordering a load of timber for the face frames of a bucketload of kitchen cabinets, and was going to order a large number of lengths of PAR oak or poplar finished to around 44mm x 22mm, domino them together and attach to the plywood carcasses. Or would pine do?
Now, should I be ordering a hardwood for the "shaker style" doors or can I get away with pine? It'll be framing a thinnish plywood centre - which according to my books is the way things are done.
Also, what do people normally use for edging plywood shelves and other things? Soft or hard wood?
Am I imagining the prices are vastly more expensive for the hard vs the soft woods? Bear in mind this is UK too American peeps.
Oh, and everything will be painted too.
Any advice greatly accepted.
Pip pip, tally ho etc.
Ridiculous really, but I really don't know much about wood. I'm comfortable with my imported African MDF and the artisan sourced plywood sheets, so apologies in advance for the basic questions, the guaranteed misuse of terminology and probable misunderstanding of any responses I receive.
About to consider ordering a load of timber for the face frames of a bucketload of kitchen cabinets, and was going to order a large number of lengths of PAR oak or poplar finished to around 44mm x 22mm, domino them together and attach to the plywood carcasses. Or would pine do?
Now, should I be ordering a hardwood for the "shaker style" doors or can I get away with pine? It'll be framing a thinnish plywood centre - which according to my books is the way things are done.
Also, what do people normally use for edging plywood shelves and other things? Soft or hard wood?
Am I imagining the prices are vastly more expensive for the hard vs the soft woods? Bear in mind this is UK too American peeps.
Oh, and everything will be painted too.
Any advice greatly accepted.
Pip pip, tally ho etc.