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Flowering Dogwood
| Name |
Flowering Dogwood (Cornus florida) |
| Type |
Hardwood. |
| Other Names |
Also known as arrow wood, cornel, false boxwood, Florida boxwood, boxwood, and bunchberry.
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| Sources |
Grows in United States and southern Canada.
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| Appearance |
Very compact, interlocked grain with a fine uniform texture.
Dark brown heartwood, sometimes streaked with white lines, and wide, creamy white to pinkish sapwood.
Most commercially available dogwood composed of sapwood.
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| Physical Props |
Very heavy, hard, strong, and shock resistant - one of the strongest and hardest in the United States.
Poor decay resistance and dimensional stability.
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| Working Props |
Works reasonably well owing to its close grain.
Glues easily and finishes to a glossy smoothness.
Renowned for staying smooth and intact under continuous wear.
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| Uses |
Used for textile weaving shuttles, spools, bobbins, mallet heads, golf club heads, pulleys, levers, tool handles, jeweler's blocks, skids, sporting goods, and machinery bearings.
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