Bookshelf Tree D
Sugar Maple, finished with a natural blend of linseed oil and beeswax. Made from boards obtained from FSC-certified mills. These trees vary from 4-5.5” and look lovely on a bookshelf — especially in the company of other trees.
About Sugar Maple
Sugar maple, also known as “eastern” or “hard” maple, is perhaps the most important furniture wood in the United States. Used for everything from kitchenware to flooring, furniture and toys, it is prized for its dense hard-wearing grain and soft texture. It is native to the Eastern United States, where it provides gifts of food and shelter to many mammals including moose, white-tailed deer, snowshoe hare, and porcupine—as well as countless birds. Maple sugar (concentrated maple sap, now processed for maple syrup) was a crucial winter food for indigenous people for thousands of years before settlers arrived in what is now known as New England. Climate experts forecast that the climate of New England will be hostile to (too warm for) sugar maples by 2050.
Sugar Maple, finished with a natural blend of linseed oil and beeswax. Made from boards obtained from FSC-certified mills. These trees vary from 4-5.5” and look lovely on a bookshelf — especially in the company of other trees.
About Sugar Maple
Sugar maple, also known as “eastern” or “hard” maple, is perhaps the most important furniture wood in the United States. Used for everything from kitchenware to flooring, furniture and toys, it is prized for its dense hard-wearing grain and soft texture. It is native to the Eastern United States, where it provides gifts of food and shelter to many mammals including moose, white-tailed deer, snowshoe hare, and porcupine—as well as countless birds. Maple sugar (concentrated maple sap, now processed for maple syrup) was a crucial winter food for indigenous people for thousands of years before settlers arrived in what is now known as New England. Climate experts forecast that the climate of New England will be hostile to (too warm for) sugar maples by 2050.
Sugar Maple, finished with a natural blend of linseed oil and beeswax. Made from boards obtained from FSC-certified mills. These trees vary from 4-5.5” and look lovely on a bookshelf — especially in the company of other trees.
About Sugar Maple
Sugar maple, also known as “eastern” or “hard” maple, is perhaps the most important furniture wood in the United States. Used for everything from kitchenware to flooring, furniture and toys, it is prized for its dense hard-wearing grain and soft texture. It is native to the Eastern United States, where it provides gifts of food and shelter to many mammals including moose, white-tailed deer, snowshoe hare, and porcupine—as well as countless birds. Maple sugar (concentrated maple sap, now processed for maple syrup) was a crucial winter food for indigenous people for thousands of years before settlers arrived in what is now known as New England. Climate experts forecast that the climate of New England will be hostile to (too warm for) sugar maples by 2050.