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Curly Quarter-Sawn Black Cherry
We sort out "curly" boards from both our "Quarter-Sawn Cherry" and our "Perfect Quarter-Sawn & Ray-Flecked Cherry" stock, thus improving the appearance of all three products. The term "curly" in cherry is different than "curly" maple. The curls in cherry average about 1" wide and have the appearance of being wavy, whereas in curly maple, the curls are tight, typically every ¼ to ½" in width. As with most of our products, this is virtually sap-free (we trim off 95% of all sap) and all boards are clear of knots and defects. Regular customers call for availability.
The finest quarter-sawn engineered flooring available anywhere.Home | About Quarter-Sawn Flooring | Quarter-Sawn and Perfect Quarter-Sawn | Our Engineering Process | What is Chatoyance? | Quarter-Sawn Flooring Products | Quarter-Sawn White Oak Flooring | Quarter-Sawn Walnut Flooring | Quarter-Sawn Maple Flooring | Quarter-Sawn Ray Flecked Maple Flooring | Quarter-Sawn Black Cherry Flooring | Quarter-Sawn Ray Flecked Cherry Flooring | Quarter-Sawn Red Oak Flooring | Quarter-Sawn Specialties | Curly Hard Maple | Curly Black Cherry | Curly Walnut | Your Wood | Solid Quarter-Sawn White Oak | Solid Riff-Sawn White Oak | Solid Walnut | About Floor Medallions | Floor Medallion Portfolio | Designing Floor Medallions | About River-Reclaimed Flooring | River-Reclaimed Examples | River-Reclaimed History | About the Company | Our Factory | News | Builders, Designers & Architects |
For the most current wholesale pricing please contact Kent at
There is a big difference between standard quarter-sawn flooring and the product we sell. You can legally call a floorboard “quarter-sawn” if its grain is between 60-90 degrees. This is best flooring available from other hardwood flooring companies. Our unique sawing process produces floorboards that are of a much higher quality with a much tighter grain – between 80-90 degrees. Having the grain running perpendicular to the surface of the flooring, while far more time intensive to produce, cuts across the wood's ray cells yielding "ray-flecked" grain with a spectacularly iridescent and shimmering "flake figure".
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