Heresy® Iii Special Edition

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Heresy® Iii Special Edition HERESY® III SPECIAL EDITION EAST INDIAN ROSEWOOD Klipsch is happy to announce a special edition production run of the Heresy in East Indian Rosewood. This exotic hardwood is genuine Rosewood and is regarded as one of the world’s most beautiful hardwoods. The wood species is native to the southern Indian peninsula. the heartwood can vary from a golden brown to deep purplish brown, with dark brown streaks. The wood darkens with age, usually becoming a deep brown color. Rosewood is so named for the fragrance of roses the wood produces when first cut. MADE IN AMERICA: HOPE, ARKANSAS The Klipsch Heresy III speaker is a testament to the quality Klipsch demands from each and every one of its audio products. Remember great sound? We do, too. The Klipsch Heresy III is still made in the USA, by proud craftsmen in Hope, Arkansas. Just like Paul W. Klipsch (PWK) intended. FEATURES SPECIFICATIONS SPECIAL EDITION FREQUENCY RESPONSE (+/- 4 dB) 58 Hz - 20 kHz This production run is limited to about 70 pairs of speakers, but future production SENSITIVITY1 99 dB @ 2.83V / 1m runs are possible. Each loudspeaker will feature a small edition plaque that is hand-signed by the craftsman. POWER HANDLING (CONT/PEAK) 100W/400W MAXIMUM SPL 116 dB Continuous COMPACT, THREE-WAY LOUDSPEAKER The Heresy was originally introduced in 1957 as a compact three-way design NOMINAL IMPEDANCE 8 Ohms Compatible utilizing a 12” woofer and horn-loaded midrange and tweeter. In 2006, the CROSSOVER FREQUENCY HF: 5000 Hz Heresy III was upgraded with a more powerful woofer, bi-wire network, as well as MF: 850 Hz midrange and tweeter compression drivers, featuring a titanium diaphragm for smooth and accurate definition. HIGH FREQUENCY DRIVER K-107-TI 1” (2.54cm) Titanium diaphragm compression driver NEW NAMEPLATE AND GRILLE MIDRANGE K-53-TI 1.75” (4.45cm) Titanium diaphragm Each pair of Heresys features “script” style nameplates mounted to a beautiful compression driver silver luster grille cloth. LOW FREQUENCY DRIVER K-28-E 12” (30.48cm) Fiber-composite NEW RISER cone woofer A matte-black slant riser base compliments the East Indian Rosewood. ENCLOSURE MATERIAL MDF BOOK-MATCHED WOOD VENEER INPUTS Dual binding posts / bi-wire / bi-amp Klipsch only uses book-matched wood veneers for the Heritage series. The veneer leaves are kept in order as they are delicately sliced from the timber and HEIGHT 23.81” (60.5cm) precisely arranged to provide a mirror image at the splice joint — like turning WIDTH 15.5” (39.37cm) the pages of a book. This gives each speaker an aesthetically appealing and consistent appearance that is treasured more than any other cut of wood veneer. DEPTH 13.25” (33.66cm) WEIGHT 44 lbs. (20kg) MATCHED PAIRS Each pair of Heritage Series loudspeakers are grain-matched using wood veneer East Indian Rosewood panels that come from the same timber. Each cabinet is carefully matched so Note: East Indian Rosewood, like most exotic hardwoods, will vary dramatically in color, grain that each speaker in the pair is practically indistinguishable from the other. The FINISH pattern, texture, and other naturally occurring speakers move seamlessly together through the factory. Each finished product is characteristics. This is due to the seasonal or geographical differences which affect the growth inspected and labeled with sequential serial numbers, ensuring that the Heritage patterns where the trees are harvested. series speakers leave the factory as a meticulously crafted set. 1 Sensitivity in average listening room 3502 WOODVIEW TRACE INDIANAPOLIS, IN 46268 | KLIPSCH.COM 1 OF 1 All specifications are subject to change without notice. ©2016 Klipsch Group, Inc. Klipsch and Tractrix are registered trademarks of Klipsch Group, Inc. A wholly-owned subsidiary of Voxx International Corporation. SPECIAL EDITION HERESY (EAST INDIAN ROSEWOOD) SPEC SHEET | V01 | 09.12.16.
Recommended publications
  • Ghana Rosewood Case Study
    MARCH, 2014 SITUATION OF GLOBAL ROSEWOOD PRODUCTION & TRADE – GHANA ROSEWOOD CASE STUDY PRESENTED BY HENRY COLEMAN - DIRECTOR OF OPERATIONS, TIMBER INDUSTRY DEVELOPMENT DIVISION, FORESTRY COMMISSION Presentation Outline • INTRODUCTION • ROSEWOOD OCCURRENCE IN GHANA • HARVESTING REGULATIONS • PRODUCTION AND TRADE • ROSEWOOD MANUFACTURING (UTILIZATION) • TIMBER (ROSEWOOD) EXPORT PROCEDURES • ROSEWOOD EXPORT BAN • CHALLENGES IN ROSEWOOD PRODUCTION & TRADE IN GHANA • WAY FORWARD • CONCLUSION INTRODUCTION (I) • In Ghana Rosewood (known locally as Krayie/Kpatro) is a common name for timber exploited from the species Pterocarpus erinaceus. • The Chinese buyers/traders in Ghana also call it Kosso. INTRODUCTION (II) • The species belongs to the family Fabaceae – Papilionoideae. • Pterocarpus erinaceus is a medium- sized, generally deciduous tree 12-15 m tall, bole often of poor form. INTRODUCTION (III) • The bark surface is finely scaly fissured, brown- blackish with thin inner bark. It produces red sap when cut. INTRODUCTION (IV) • Traditionally, the species is used for the production of high quality charcoal and for building construction especially by local people. Rosewood Occurrence in Ghana (I) • The species occurs mostly in the forest savannah transitional zone and parts of the northern savannah woodland ecological zone. • Found in open forest and wooded savannah. Rosewood Occurrence in Ghana (II) • There are ten regions in Ghana. • Rosewood occurs in six of these regions, namely, Asha nti, Brong Ahafo, Northern, Upp er East, Upper West and Volta regions. HARVESTING REGULATIONS • Generally, Timber resource allocation & harvesting is based on Timber Resources Management Act, Act 547 of 1998 and the related Regulation LI 1649 of 1999. • For Rosewood, the issuance of permit to contractors prior to exploitation and monitoring exploitation once the permit has been issued have been the main regulatory mechanism since the surge in its export.
    [Show full text]
  • Project Rapid-Field Identification of Dalbergia Woods and Rosewood Oil by NIRS Technology –NIRS ID
    Project Rapid-Field Identification of Dalbergia Woods and Rosewood Oil by NIRS Technology –NIRS ID. The project has been financed by the CITES Secretariat with funds from the European Union Consulting objectives: TO SELECT INTERNATIONAL OR NATIONAL XYLARIUM OR WOOD COLLECTIONS REGISTERED AT THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF WOOD ANATOMISTS – IAWA THAT HAVE A SIGNIFICANT NUMBER OF SPECIES AND SPECIMENS OF THE GENUS DALBERGIA TO BE ANALYZED BY NIRS TECHNOLOGY. Consultant: VERA TERESINHA RAUBER CORADIN Dra English translation: ADRIANA COSTA Dra Affiliations: - Forest Products Laboratory, Brazilian Forest Service (LPF-SFB) - Laboratory of Automation, Chemometrics and Environmental Chemistry, University of Brasília (AQQUA – UnB) - Forest Technology and Geoprocessing Foundation - FUNTEC-DF MAY, 2020 Brasília – Brazil 1 Project number: S1-32QTL-000018 Host Country: Brazilian Government Executive agency: Forest Technology and Geoprocessing Foundation - FUNTEC Project coordinator: Dra. Tereza C. M. Pastore Project start: September 2019 Project duration: 24 months 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS 1. INTRODUCTION 05 2. THE SPECIES OF THE GENUS DALBERGIA 05 3. MATERIAL AND METHODS 3.1 NIRS METHODOLOGY AND SPECTRA COLLECTION 07 3.2 CRITERIA FOR SELECTING XYLARIA TO BE VISITED TO OBTAIN SPECTRAS 07 3 3 TERMINOLOGY 08 4. RESULTS 4.1 CONTACTED XYLARIA FOR COLLECTION SURVEY 10 4.1.1 BRAZILIAN XYLARIA 10 4.1.2 INTERNATIONAL XYLARIA 11 4.2 SELECTED XYLARIA 11 4.3 RESULTS OF THE SURVEY OF DALBERGIA SAMPLES IN THE BRAZILIAN XYLARIA 13 4.4 RESULTS OF THE SURVEY OF DALBERGIA SAMPLES IN THE INTERNATIONAL XYLARIA 14 5. CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS 19 6. REFERENCES 20 APPENDICES 22 APPENDIX I DALBERGIA IN BRAZILIAN XYLARIA 22 CACAO RESEARCH CENTER – CEPECw 22 EMÍLIO GOELDI MUSEUM – M.
    [Show full text]
  • Cocobolo Samuel J
    View metadata, citation and similar papers at core.ac.uk brought to you by CORE provided by Yale University Yale University EliScholar – A Digital Platform for Scholarly Publishing at Yale Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies School of Forestry and Environmental Studies Bulletin Series 1923 Cocobolo Samuel J. Record George A. Garratt Follow this and additional works at: https://elischolar.library.yale.edu/yale_fes_bulletin Part of the Forest Biology Commons, Forest Management Commons, and the Wood Science and Pulp, Paper Technology Commons Recommended Citation Record, Samuel J., and George A. Garratt. 1923. ocC obolo. Yale School of Forestry Bulletin 8. 42 pp. + plates This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the School of Forestry and Environmental Studies at EliScholar – A Digital Platform for Scholarly Publishing at Yale. It has been accepted for inclusion in Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies Bulletin Series by an authorized administrator of EliScholar – A Digital Platform for Scholarly Publishing at Yale. For more information, please contact [email protected]. A Note to Readers 2012 This volume is part of a Bulletin Series inaugurated by the Yale School of Forestry & Environmental Studies in 1912. The Series contains important original scholarly and applied work by the School’s faculty, graduate students, alumni, and distinguished collaborators, and covers a broad range of topics. Bulletins 1-97 were published as bound print-only documents between 1912 and 1994. Starting with Bulletin 98 in 1995, the School began publishing volumes digitally and expanded them into a Publication Series that includes working papers, books, and reports as well as Bulletins.
    [Show full text]
  • Rosewood) to CITES Appendix II.2 the New Listings Entered Into Force on January 2, 2017
    Original language: English CoP18 Inf. 50 (English only / únicamente en inglés / seulement en anglais) CONVENTION ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES OF WILD FAUNA AND FLORA ____________________ Eighteenth meeting of the Conference of the Parties Geneva (Switzerland), 17-28 August 2019 IMPLEMENTING CITES ROSEWOOD SPECIES LISTINGS: A DIAGNOSTIC GUIDE FOR ROSEWOOD RANGE STATES This document has been submitted by the United States of America at the request of the World Resources Institute in relation to agenda item 74.* * The geographical designations employed in this document do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the CITES Secretariat (or the United Nations Environment Programme) concerning the legal status of any country, territory, or area, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. The responsibility for the contents of the document rests exclusively with its author. CoP18 Inf. 50 – p. 1 Draft for Comment August 2019 Implementing CITES Rosewood Species Listings A Diagnostic Guide for Rosewood Range States Charles Victor Barber Karen Winfield DRAFT August 2019 Corresponding Author: Charles Barber [email protected] Draft for Comment August 2019 INTRODUCTION The 17th Meeting of the Conference of the Parties (COP-17) to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), held in South Africa during September- October 2016, marked a turning point in CITES’ treatment of timber species. While a number of tree species had been brought under CITES regulation over the previous decades1, COP-17 saw a marked expansion of CITES timber species listings. The Parties at COP-17 listed the entire Dalbergia genus (some 250 species, including many of the most prized rosewoods), Pterocarpus erinaceous (kosso, a highly-exploited rosewood species from West Africa) and three Guibourtia species (bubinga, another African rosewood) to CITES Appendix II.2 The new listings entered into force on January 2, 2017.
    [Show full text]
  • Panama’S Illegal Rosewood Logging Boom from Dalbergia Retusa
    Global Ecology and Conservation 23 (2020) e01098 Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Global Ecology and Conservation journal homepage: http://www.elsevier.com/locate/gecco Original Research Article Panama’s illegal rosewood logging boom from Dalbergia retusa * Ella Vardeman a, b, d, , Julie Velasquez Runk a, c a University of Georgia, Athens, GA, 30602, USA b City University of New York, Graduate Center, 365 5th Ave, New York, NY, 10016, USA c Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, Balboa, Panama d The New York Botanical Garden (NYBG), Institute of Economic Botany, 2900 Southern Boulevard, Bronx, NY 10458, USA article info abstract Article history: Over the last decade, illegal rosewood logging has surged worldwide, with much attrib- Received 9 December 2019 utable to an uptick in Chinese demand. For the last seventy-five years, Panama’s main use Received in revised form 30 April 2020 of cocobolo rosewood (Dalbergia retusa) was in small pieces for artisanal carvings, its state Accepted 30 April 2020 of conservation favoring merchantable timber for recent exploitation with the surging market. Panama’s cocobolo rosewood boom was from 2011 to 2015 and, given regulations, Keywords: was largely illicit. However, no data on cocobolo logging have been made public. Here, we Dalbergia retusa assess Panama’s cocobolo logging. We used a media analysis of Panamanian and inter- Panama Media analysis national reports on cocobolo logging from January 2000 to February 2018 coupled with Illegal logging long-term socio-environmental research to show how logging changed during the boom. We conducted a content analysis of articles to address four specific objectives: 1) to assess how cocobolo logging intensity changed over time; 2) to determine what topics related to logging were important for the press to relay to the public; 3) to show how logging changed geographically as the boom progressed; 4) to demonstrate how Panama and the international community responded to the global boom with new policies on rosewood governance.
    [Show full text]
  • Overview Guitar Models
    14.04.2011 HOHNER - HISTORICAL GUITAR MODELS page 1 [54] Image Category Model Name Year from-to Description former retail price Musima Resonata classical; beginners guitar; mahogany back and sides Acoustic 129 (730) ca. 1988 140 DM (1990) with celluloid binding; 19 frets Acoustic A EAGLE 2004 Top Wood: Spruce - Finish : Natural - Guitar Hardware: Grover Tuners BR CLASSIC CITY Acoustic 1999 Fingerboard: Rosewood - Pickup Configuration: H-H (BATON ROUGE) electro-acoustic; solid spruce top; striped ebony back and sides; maple w/ abalone binding; mahogany neck; solid ebony fingerboard and Acoustic CE 800 E 2007 bridge; Gold Grover 3-in-line tuners; shadow P7 pickup, 3-band EQ; single cutaway; colour: natural electro-acoustic; solid spruce top; striped ebony back and sides; maple Acoustic CE 800 S 2007 w/ abalone binding; mahogany neck; solid ebony fingerboard and bridge; Gold Grover 3-in-line tuners; single cutaway; colour: natural dreadnought western guitar; Gruhn design; 20 nickel silver frets; rosewood veneer on headstock; mahogany back and sides; spruce top, Acoustic D 1 ca. 1991 950 DM (1992) scalloped bracings; mahogany neck with rosewood fingerboard; satin finish; Gotoh die-cast machine heads dreadnought western guitar; Gruhn design; rosewood back and sides; spruce top, scalloped bracings; mahogany neck with rosewood Acoustic D 2 ca. 1991 1100 DM (1992) fingerboard; 20 nickel silver frets; rosewood veneer on headstock; satin finish; Gotoh die-cast machine heads Top Wood: Sitka Spruce - Back: Rosewood - Sides: Rosewood - Guitar Acoustic
    [Show full text]
  • Malagasy Precious Hardwoods Scientific and Technical Assessment to Meet CITES Objectives
    Malagasy Precious Hardwoods Scientific and technical assessment to meet CITES objectives World Resources Institute 8 July 2016 Photo credit: Annah Peterson Agenda • Introduction on precious hardwoods: Rosewood and Ebony • Summary of the history and CITES Action Plan • Objectives of this assessment • Results • Recommendations • Conclusions • Discussion Back to School: Botany 101 Coconut Palm, Cocos nucifera How do you know? Leaves Habitat Fruits Trunk Coconut Palm, Cocos nucifera Which photo is Cocos nucifera? A) B) C) D) Cocos nucifera Vetchia arecina Ravenala madagascariensis Washingtonia robusta Photos: Catalogues des plantes vasculaires de Madagascar, TROPICOS Which photo is Dalbergia? A) B) C) D) Tectona grandis Dalbergia emirnensis Canarium madagascariensis Tambourissa sp. indet. Photos: Catalogues des plantes vasculaires de Madagascar, TROPICOS Malagasy Precious Woods Rosewood and Pallisander (Dalbergia spp.) Ebony (Diospyros spp.) Photos: The Guardian, Dec 23, 2013; An Introduction To Wood Species, Part 9: Ebony, Sept 11, 2013 Dalbergia and Diospyros Brazilian rosewoord, Dalbergia nigra Persimmon (kaki), Diospyros kaki Photos: Globaltrees.org; Global Survey of ex-situ ebony collections, BGCI Dalbergia and Diospyros Source: Discover Life, Global Mapper Brief History Precious Woods Industry in Madagascar • 1900’s: First documentation of the export of Malagasy rosewood • 1975: Law prohibiting the export of rosewood logs • 1991: Madagascar National Environmental Action Plan • 2000 and 2006: A moratorium on the export of rosewood and
    [Show full text]
  • ROUTES of EXTINCTION: the Corruption and Violence Destroying Siamese Rosewood in the Mekong CONTENTS
    ROUTES OF EXTINCTION: The corruption and violence destroying Siamese rosewood in the Mekong CONTENTS 1 INTRODUCTION 2 THE ILLEGAL SIAMESE ROSEWOOD TRADE ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 4 A DIRTY BLOODY BUSINESS This document has been produced with the financial assistance of UKaid, the European Union and the 7 GOVERNANCE FAILURES Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation (NORAD). 9 INTERNATIONAL PROTECTION EFFORTS 10 REGIONAL HONGMU CRIME SCENES This report was written and edited by the Environmental Investigation Agency UK Ltd, 12 THE SIAMESE ROSEWOOD TRAIL and can under no circumstances be regarded as reflecting the positions of Ukaid, the European Union, or NORAD. 22 THE IRRATIONAL EXPANSION OF THE HONGMU INDUSTRY Designed by: www.designsolutions.me.uk 24 RECOMMENDATIONS Many thanks to Emmerson Press for the printing of this report: Emmerson Press: +44 (0) 1926 854400 Printed on recycled paper May 2014 GLOSSARY OF TERMS: Siamese rosewood: refers to Dalbergia cochinchinensis Pierre spp., also known as Thailand rosewood Burmese rosewood: refers to Dalbergia bariensis spp (synonymous with Dalbergia oliveri) ENVIRONMENTAL INVESTIGATION AGENCY (EIA) Padauk: refers only to Pterocarpus macrocarpus 62/63 Upper Street, London N1 0NY, UK (synonymous with Pterocarpus pedatus) Tel: +44 (0) 20 7354 7960 Hongmu: refers to wood species or furniture made Email: [email protected] with wood species approved as official Hongmu in www.eia-international.org China’s 2000 National Standard for Hongmu Tonne/s: refers to a metric tonne, equaling 1,000 kilograms FRONT COVER: Rosewood carving in Dong Ky, Vietnam, October 2013. © EIA INTRODUCTION This is a tragic true story of high culture, peerless art forms, and a rich historical identity being warped by greed and obsession, which consumes its very foundations to extinction and sparks a violent crime wave across Asian forests.
    [Show full text]
  • Wood & Veneer Care and Maintenance
    Materials Wood & Veneer Care and Maintenance Wood and veneer products are natural wood, requiring more attention than other surfaces. When properly cared for, it will last long and keep looking beautiful. To maintain the quality of your Herman Miller products, please follow the cleaning procedures outlined here. Wood & Veneer Stains Herman Miller products finished with wood, wood veneer, Herman Miller woods and veneers meet strict testing standards or recut wood veneer, except the oiled Eames Lounge and for resistance to wear, light, stains, water, and pressure. Ottoman with Rosewood, Oiled Walnut, or Oiled Santos Palisander veneer, and the Eames Sofa back panels with To reduce the risk of damage, take some precautions: Oiled Walnut, unless specifically noted. Use coasters for glasses and mugs. Routine Care If a glass top is added to the wood or veneer surface, be sure it Normal Cleaning rests on felt pads. Dust regularly with a slightly damp, soft, lint-free cloth. Don’t place a potted plant on a wood or veneer surface unless Wipe dry with a dry, soft cloth in the direction of the wood grain. it’s in a water-tight container or in a drip tray. Spills should be immediately wiped up with a damp cloth. Don’t let vinyl binders stay on a surface for very long. Use protective pads under equipment with “rubber” cushioning Once a month feet. Some chemical compounds used in the feet on office Clean the surface with a soft cloth dampened with a quality equipment, such as printers and monitor stands, may leave cleaner formulated for wood furniture.
    [Show full text]
  • Martin Guitar: Navigating Sustainability and Legacy
    A Better World, Through Better Business Martin Guitar: Navigating Sustainability and Legacy Written by: Tristan Davis Hakan Stanis Zineb Touzani Ananya Vidyarthi Supervised and Edited by: Chet Van Wert, Senior Research Scholar, NYU Stern CSB November 2020 Introduction1 On a clear winter morning in January 2020, Jacqueline Renner, President of C.F. Martin & Co., Inc. (Martin Guitar), was reviewing the company’s strategy for sourcing environmentally sustainable wood for its acoustic guitar production operations. The two members of Renner’s staff most directly concerned with wood sustainability – Frank Untermyer, Director of Supply Chain Management, and Cindy McAllister, Director of Intellectual Property, Community and Government Relations – were discussing a crucial choice the company faced, but did not agree on the strategy Martin should adopt. Renner understood and appreciated both points of view, but could only choose one. Martin produced acoustic guitars with a uniquely rich sound, which had been preferred by popular music icons for 100 years or more. In his memoir, Chronicles, Bob Dylan described the experience of playing the Martin Dreadnought, saying that a “six-string guitar became a crystal magic wand.”i Martin’s distinctive sound resulted from a combination of innovative design and the use of “tonewoods” – specifically, rosewood, mahogany, ebony, and spruce. In the early decades of the 21st century, the company’s dependence on these raw materials had become increasingly problematic. The beauty of tonewoods meant they were in high demand by several industries, notably furniture and musical instrument manufacturing. Old-growth tonewood forests around the world were being decimated, threatening Martin’s future supply and, not incidentally, accelerating climate change.
    [Show full text]
  • Chapter 3--Physical Properties and Moisture Relations of Wood
    Chapter 3 Physical Properties and Moisture Relations of Wood William Simpson and Anton TenWolde he versatility of wood is demonstrated by a wide Contents variety of products. This variety is a result of a Appearance 3–1 spectrum of desirable physical characteristics or properties among the many species of wood. In many cases, Grain and Texture 3–1 more than one property of wood is important to the end Plainsawn and Quartersawn 3–2 product. For example, to select a wood species for a product, the value of appearance-type properties, such as texture, grain Decorative Features 3–2 pattern, or color, may be evaluated against the influence of Moisture Content 3–5 characteristics such as machinability, dimensional stability, Green Wood and Fiber Saturation Point 3–5 or decay resistance. Equilibrium Moisture Content 3–5 Wood exchanges moisture with air; the amount and direction of the exchange (gain or loss) depend on the relative humid- Sorption Hysteresis 3–7 ity and temperature of the air and the current amount of water Shrinkage 3–7 in the wood. This moisture relationship has an important Transverse and Volumetric 3–7 influence on wood properties and performance. This chapter discusses the physical properties of most interest in the Longitudinal 3–8 design of wood products. Moisture–Shrinkage Relationship 3–8 Some physical properties discussed and tabulated are influ- Weight, Density, and Specific Gravity 3–11 enced by species as well as variables like moisture content; Working Qualities 3–15 other properties tend to be independent of species. The thor- oughness of sampling and the degree of variability influence Decay Resistance 3–15 the confidence with which species-dependent properties are Thermal Properties 3–15 known.
    [Show full text]
  • Arbor Wood Wallcoverings
    TRUST ARBOR WOOD WALLCOVERINGS ARBOR DESIGN GUIDE ARBOR is a comprehensive line of wood wallcoverings and a popular choice for any high-quality interior, made from the highest AA architectural-grade wood veneer. When you need to make quick, first-pass decisions trust this ARBOR DESIGN GUIDE to help focus and narrow your wood veneer wallcovering choices. Then call us, we are here to help! To view our complete line of Arbor products (species, color, and cuts) visit us at koroseal.com/arbor 1 2 CHOICES FOR DESIGNING CHOOSE YOUR CHOOSE YOUR CHOOSE YOUR WITH ARBOR CUT COLOR FACE MATCH Your guide to understanding Arbor® Wood Veneer Wallcoverings FC: Flat or Plain Cut LIGHT Book Match The use of veneer dates back nearly 4,000 years as early forms of it were QC: Quarter Cut Slip Match found in the tombs of Egyptian pharaohs. Producing highly prized veneer Rift Cut Swing Match RC: Rotary Cut Random Plank entails slicing a thin layer of wood of uniform thickness from a log. Then the Figured more… veneer is produced into sheets covering wall and ceiling surfaces. QC RT Figured Recon DARK With over 100 species of wood, colors and cuts, Arbor is easy to install and provides substantial cost savings compared to traditional millwork. With COLOR is one of the most Arbor’s patented process for slicing incredibly thin veneer, each log’s yield customizable aspects of Arbor increases by approximately 300%. Wood Wallcoverings. If you don’t see a color/stain that matches your vision give us a call - we can help! * Wood is a natural product, and accordingly, color, tone, and grain configuration may vary from the images shown in this brochure or sampling.
    [Show full text]