Materials
ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZTeak was introduced into Britain in the 19th Century. It has great strength and hardness and is an oily timber. Ideal for window frames and agrden furniture.
Tropical hardwoods including ebony, laurel, rosewood, sandlewood, teak, belalu, sonokeling or black rosewood, raintree, magnolia, jackfruit, crockodile or satinwood, chinaberry.
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- Oak
- Elm
- Alabaster
- Aluminium
- Amboyna and Walnut
- Birch
- Ash
- Bakelite
- Bamboo
- Beech
- Beech and Elm
- Bentwood
- Bone
- Boxwood
- Burr Walnut
- Camphor Wood
- Cane
- Card
- Cast Iron
- Cedar
- Ceramic
- Cherry Wood
- China
- Chrome
- Copper
- Coromandel Wood
- Crystal
- Cuban Mahogany
- Diamond
- Earthenware
- Ebonised
- Ebony
- Elm and Ash
- Enamel
- Faux Bamboo
- Flame Mahogany
- Fruitwood
- Fur
- Fibreglass
- Bronze
- Gilt
- Giltwood
- Glass
- Gold
- Golden Oak
- Honduras Mahogany
- Inlaid
- Iron
- Ivory
- Jade
- Kingwood
- Lacquered
- Leather
- Lignum Vitae
- Lime Wood
- Limed Oak
- Linden wood
- Mahogany
- Mahogany and Elm
- Mahogany and Fruitwood
- Maple
- Marble
- Marquetry
- Mother of Pearl
- Oak and Brass
- Oak and Elm
- Oak and Mahogany
- Oak and Walnut
- Ormalu
- Padouk wood
- Painted
- Paper
- Papier Mache
- Pewter
- Pine
- Plaster
- Platinum
- Porcelain
- Red Walnut
- Rosewood
- Satin Birch
- Satin Walnut
- Satinwood
- Silk
- Silver
- Slate
- Snakeskin
- Spelter
- Steel
- Stone
- Sycamore
- Teak
- Terracotta
- Tin
- Tortoise Shell
- Tropical Hardwoods
- Tulipwood
- Vellum
- Walnut
- Whitby Jet
- Wool
- Wrought Iron
- Yew
- Brass