|
|||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||
The woods of some other species in the genus Dalbergia are notable, even famous, woods in their own right: African Blackwood, cocobolo, kingwood, and tulipwood. The Indian souvenir trade tries to sell objects made of Dalbergia sissoo (sometimes stained purple) as if they were rosewood. The wood of some other species is usable for toolhandles, at best. The timber trade will sell many timbers under the name 'rosewood' (with an adjective) due to similarities in figure. A fair number of these timbers come from other leguminous genera: one that is often mentioned is Machaerium scleroxylon. In essential oilSteam distilled from the wood chips of the tree, rosewood oil is not widely used for therapeutic purposes, and little research into its medicinal value has been done. Its scent makes it popular as a fragrance and deodorant, and it is a favorite ingredient in many body and skin care products.
In musical instrumentsBecause of its density and strong resonance, Honduras rosewood is a favourite choice for makers of marimba or xylophone keys, (although most such instruments are not made of this wood). Brazilian rosewood is (was) a popular wood for guitar fingerboards, and acoustic guitar backs and sides. However, due to its protected status and spiraling prices, Indian and Madagascar rosewood are being used extensively in its place. Rosewood is also used in limited quantities for clarinets; the various qualities of rosewood gives the tone of a clarinet made of it a richer, darker sound than is generally obtained from traditional clarinets made of mpingo wood. Also, rosewood is occasionally used to make oboes, especially in chamber orchestras where less projection is needed (grenadilla has much more projection). Instruments from the violin family sometimes use rosewood for their tuning pegs, fingerboards, tailpieces, & chinrests.br:Jacaranda de:Palisander fr:Palissandre fr:Bois de rose hu:Paliszander nl:Palissander no:Rosentre pl:Palisander pt:Jacarandá fi:Palisanteri
|
Sites |
Searched sites for "Rosewood (timber)" |
|
No sites found. |
Sorry, no matching site records were found. |
Want your site listed here?
|
|||||||||||||
|
Submit
your site |
|
Relevant quality search results and fast easy navigation throughout the
different sections of the site, make Americola.com |