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Custom end table - white oak with white wash on welded steel frame
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End/Cocktail Table - White Washed White Oak
- 20"d x 20"w x 13.5"h
- Base: Welded Steel with a Cocoa Powder coat finish
- Top: White Oak with a White Wash Stain
- Base:20" sq., 23.5" sq., 30" sq., 22" x 34"
- All 8.5", 11", 13.5", 16" or 23.5"h
- 30" x 47.5" x 8.5", 11", 13.5" or 16"
Important Info
Please be advised that these finishes are an approximate representation only, as colours seen on the web are rarely 100% true, and different monitors will display colours differently.
Matching stain colours
If you are trying to match an existing piece, please keep in mind that over time wood furniture will change in colour. Lighter stains will often darken a few shades and exposure to bright light may fade some darker tones.Also please keep in mind that different manufacturers may use a stain with the same name, but they are not necessarily identical. In addition, each manufacturer has their own way of applying stain. Just as there are hundreds of shades of white paint, there are just as many permutations of an Espresso stain.
Factors which impact stain colours
Different types of wood even different batches of the same type of wood will take stains differently and even a single piece of wood will not absorb stain uniformly. This is due to the fact that every tree and resulting plank of wood will have a unique grain pattern with different curves, knots or mineral streaks as a result of the individual growing conditions. These small quirks or so called imperfections are what cannot be manufactured, they are the influences of nature that make solid wood instantly recognizable and sought after.
As a result, these pictures can only be an approximation and not exact.
Custom end table - white oak with white wash on welded steel frame
Available Woods
Maple
Rift Cut White Oak
Rift cut White Oak has a darker and browner undertone than the Red Oak, it is also a harder wood with a finer grain. Rift cut means that the lumber was cut from the centre part of the tree where the grain is the straightest and finest. This means a lower yield which in turn makes this a more expensive wood. Most often seen with a lighter stain or white wash, this wood is a designer favourite.
Stains on Maple
Stains on Rift Cut White Oak
Please be advised that these colours are an approximate representation only, as colours seen on the web are rarely 100% true, and different monitors will display colours differently.