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Here is the story: my friend gives me a piece of wood that looks like firewood, sort of triangular that looks like a cross between burgundy and purple. It’s very heavy. He does not know the species. It was given to him. I have had it in the shop for 15 years. I finally decided to slice of a piece to make a ring dish. It is very dense and naturally oily. I used two different wood apps to try to figure out what the wood is. The best I can tell, it’s in the rosewood family but that’s just an educated guess. What I do know is that the wood is pretty, I’m not allergic to it (some exotics cause some people to have allergic reactions, primarily to the dust) it works up really well and takes a very high gloss polish. The color changes depending on the light source. So here it is, a small rosewood (I think) ring dish with a rounded, curved taper, undercut rim and a small raised foot. It has a food safe, natural, oil finish.
4 1/4" x 1"
Here is the story: my friend gives me a piece of wood that looks like firewood, sort of triangular that looks like a cross between burgundy and purple. It’s very heavy. He does not know the species. It was given to him. I have had it in the shop for 15 years. I finally decided to slice of a piece to make a ring dish. It is very dense and naturally oily. I used two different wood apps to try to figure out what the wood is. The best I can tell, it’s in the rosewood family but that’s just an educated guess. What I do know is that the wood is pretty, I’m not allergic to it (some exotics cause some people to have allergic reactions, primarily to the dust) it works up really well and takes a very high gloss polish. The color changes depending on the light source. So here it is, a small rosewood (I think) ring dish with a rounded, curved taper, undercut rim and a small raised foot. It has a food safe, natural, oil finish.
4 1/4" x 1"
Here is the story: my friend gives me a piece of wood that looks like firewood, sort of triangular that looks like a cross between burgundy and purple. It’s very heavy. He does not know the species. It was given to him. I have had it in the shop for 15 years. I finally decided to slice of a piece to make a ring dish. It is very dense and naturally oily. I used two different wood apps to try to figure out what the wood is. The best I can tell, it’s in the rosewood family but that’s just an educated guess. What I do know is that the wood is pretty, I’m not allergic to it (some exotics cause some people to have allergic reactions, primarily to the dust) it works up really well and takes a very high gloss polish. The color changes depending on the light source. So here it is, a small rosewood (I think) ring dish with a rounded, curved taper, undercut rim and a small raised foot. It has a food safe, natural, oil finish.
4 1/4" x 1"