I sometimes wonder if the type of cherry itself plays a part in how it takes the color
This stock was cut from a long dead Bing Cherry tree .
The area I live in used to have miles and miles of fruit orchards
A neighbor of mine some time back called up and stated that his father had all this fruit wood out in his old barn and wondered if I could use it .
When I got over there . Most all of it was in small slabs for either turning of making veneers.
The old guy had stacks of wood and had labeled everything .
I came home with one plank that was labeled Royal Lambert and I was able to get 4 nice pistol stocks from it .
The larger plank was labeled Bings
The wood was completely different in its grain . Now I don’t know if that was do to the way it was grown or what .
But the lamberts is somewhat wavy in it character and has a rather natural pink tent as its aged .
The Bings, I ended up using right away . The coloring seemed to be more marbled with converging degrees of natural color . Very much near a Burrell from one end to the other
Maybe this was also do to the age of the tree . I cant say as there was no information on the piece . But as you can see it was a Phenomenal piece of wood .