How many years does an oak need to become stained. Bog oak is a unique natural material! Stained wood in the interior

Bog oak is a unique material, the creation of which sometimes took many thousands of years by nature. What does this black material with silver-gray veins remember, having absorbed the history of centuries, millennia? It is impossible to find a more beautiful and elegant, strict texture of wood than bog oak. Unfortunately, at present, due to a number of reasons, there is an acute shortage of cognitive and specialized information on the topic of occurrence in nature, use and application of bog oak.

Often, as if in passing, in the works of venerable writers or in historical documents, we receive information about exquisite, valuable and unique products or objects made of bog oak. Either we learn that Tsar Peter gives his wife Ekaterina a box of marvelous work made of the unusual beauty of bog oak, then we learn that souvenirs made of bog oak, along with family jewels, were passed down from generation to generation. And paying closer attention to such information, we learn that bog oak products were an ornament, a source of pride for the most exquisite European palaces. For example, in 1713, the English craftsman Clausen made the Imperial Throne for Peter I from bog oak and gilded silver, which today stands in the Small Throne Room of the Winter Palace. The son of Mary Stuart, James I, expressed a desire to have a throne made of bog oak, "... so that its healing properties would contribute to righteous rule ...", and after the official coronation received this valuable gift from the English Parliament. The knights of King Arthur gathered around a round table made of bog oak to make serious decisions.

In Russia, presenting gifts made of ebony on especially solemn occasions has become a tradition. Cabinets, armchairs, bureaus were presented for anniversaries and official appointments. For the wedding and the day of the angel, the ladies were presented with caskets, caskets and small carved angels made of bog oak. These souvenirs, along with family jewels, were passed down from generation to generation. The generals bequeathed cabinets made of bog oak to their grandchildren, and the elderly countess could give her great-granddaughter a little angel, which she had inherited from her grandmother, for good luck. Currently, products from bog oak are stored either in museums (for example, in the National Museum in Dublin, etc.), palaces, or in private collections.

What is bog oak? Why is there so little information about him at the moment? What is its price? And how can you get it? Bog oak is a lumber obtained from black oak with a purple tint (popularly known as "blue wing" or "anthracite") and subtle silver veins. He was in a humid environment without access to oxygen according to radiocarbon analysis of 800 years.

In ancient times, oak forests grew on the banks of rivers and lakes. Rivers over the centuries often have to change the direction of their movement. As a result, the water, changing the direction of movement, washed away the banks, and the mighty centuries-old oaks gradually ended up in the river. As time went on, the sand washed away both trunks and branches with a multi-meter layer. Any tree in such conditions is doomed to complete destruction, but the oak is just starting its second life. Oak bark and wood contain a large amount of tannins - tannins, which are amorphous polymeric substances, the exact composition and structure of most of which have not yet been clarified. The content of tannins is very significant. In the oak core they contain 6% - 11%, in the bark from 5% to 16%. Tannins are perfectly soluble in water, easily oxidized. It should be especially noted that when combined with iron salts contained in water, tannins give a dark blue color, as a result of which the wood of oak located in the river acquires a black color with a dark blue tint and noble gray veins over the years. In general, bog oak strikes the imagination with the history of its creation. Seeing a dried, centuries-old stained tree, you admire the path he had to go through. Especially striking is the outer layer, consisting of rough plates of natural black coal. Do you involuntarily think about how much energy was seething in this tree deep in water or earth during its second life? How could the outer layer of wood turn into coal without being burned? And why is it already recycled, even in the form of a simple polished part, when touched, it radiates a soft, gentle energy? After all, it has long been noticed that the one who came into contact with the bog oak is forever subdued by its deep power, beauty and originality.

A flooded tree is greatly influenced by the flow of water and sand. The bark of the oak leaves the tree, and the peeled trunk is covered with a unique pattern created by water and sand. With the subsequent change in the riverbed, the trees covered with sand and silt are at a considerable distance from the flowering oak forests. After many years, as a result of another change in the movement of the river, the water washes away the sand, and the oak is again on the surface. And so from year to year, from century to century, from millennium to millennium. Lakes also go their way from birth to old age, turning into swamps and then into peat bogs, hiding fallen trees for many years. This process is also very long.

For example, during excavations of peat bogs in Ireland (1960), oaks were found, the age of which, according to radiocarbon analysis, is from 4000 to 7000 years.

S. I. Ivachenko in 1973, under a 6-meter layer of river sediment near the village of Shchuchye on the banks of the Don, discovered an oak canoe that had lain for 4000 years and was perfectly preserved. Currently, the boat is on display at the Historical Museum in Moscow. From ancient times, bog oak was mined in rivers from great depths. Then it was dried for many years, and the methods of drying bog oak were a strict secret. And since the amount of bog oak was very limited, the manufacture of products from it was trusted only by recognized, experienced craftsmen, the so-called cabinetmakers. From the second half of the 12th century until the 15th-16th centuries, in the best houses of England, Germany, Bohemia (Czech Republic), furniture and interiors made of bog oak and decorated with beautiful, virtuoso flat-relief and openwork carvings were very common. Later, with the appearance in Europe of a large number of mahogany from America and Africa (1720) and due to the lack of bog oak in sufficient volumes, cabinetmakers began to be called cabinetmakers. The stocks of bog oak in Europe, and later in America, were exhausted by the beginning of the last century. Currently, the discovery of bog oak in European countries is an event. And those few experts who know the true value of bog oak treat it very carefully.

In our country, for a number of reasons, bog oak has long been deleted from the list of materials that could be widely mined and used. On the one hand, it was considered a valuable material, the extraction of which was officially prohibited, and on the other hand, bog oak, until recently, was quite difficult for technical extraction and processing.

As a result, in the USSR, a huge, rich country, bog oak has been equally used over the past 70 years both as a unique lumber and as elementary firewood. There are known cases of delivery of bog oak for the manufacture of a special order by helicopter technology. But, for example, when performing bottom-dredging works, the mined bog oak, due to small volumes and difficulties in processing, was easier to burn than to be officially credited and give it a new life. At present, due to new economic relations, bog oak reserves will be in demand very soon. However, the stock of bog oak in the Republic of Belarus is limited and one can be sure that in a few years it will be exhausted.

Like gold and platinum from metals, diamond from minerals, so bog oak is the most valued and hard-to-reach wood material created by nature over many centuries and millennia. Its reserves are limited and irreplaceable. Each bog oak has passed its own individual, centuries-old path. Therefore, each copy is unique and unique. Given the irreplaceable supply of bog oak, the true cost of bog oak lumber must be an order of magnitude higher than any of the most expensive lumber ever created by nature.

The extraction and processing of bog oak is associated with a number of difficulties. It should be immediately taken into account that the bog oak, from the moment it enters the water until it rises, withstands many thousands of cycles of alternating physical and climatic loads. Imagine a mighty oak fallen into the river, which for many years firmly holds its roots to the high bank. Meter by meter, for many years the crown of the tree and the trunk itself are immersed in water. For a long time, before it is completely immersed in water, it is helpless against the effects of water, wind, frost and heat, which in itself is already detrimental to wood. In addition, it is of no small importance in which soil the tree is subsequently immersed. Either it will be washed out with clay or sand, which in turn also affects the properties of wood in different ways. The thickness of the layer under which the tree is located is also important, and the pressure exerted on the tree depends on the value of which.

The type of oak also matters, as it is known that there are 600 types of oak in the world, each of which has its own individual differences, ranging from density to texture features. At present, only pedunculate oak is widespread in our Republic, and on the territory of the former Soviet Union there were only 19 species, and it is possible that during the millennia ago, the species component of oak was more extensive. It should be noted that for bog oak it is quite difficult to determine its botanical name. The age of the oak also affects the condition of the wood. Of great importance is the health factor of the tree, the presence or absence of diseases, wormholes and other damage. Constantly being in a humid environment, bog oak, like no other wood, is subject to swelling. The swelling of bog oak is due to the colloidal nature of the wood substance, which belongs to the class of limited swelling gels. It depends on many factors, among which the most important are the amount of absorbed bound water and the density of wood, its anatomical structure and morphology of cell walls, temperature, moisture stress, and others. Swelling is complicated by the fact that individual chemical components of wood are localized in different morphological elements of the cell wall and have different ability to swell. At the same time, the moisture content of the lifted wood depends on the duration of the stay of wood in water, which ranges from 110% - 200%. Moreover, it was found that with an increased moisture content (over 115%), the physical and mechanical properties of bog oak wood change for the worse and correspond to the properties of such types of wood as alder, aspen. This is due to the fact that with a very long stay in a humid environment, wood is destroyed at the cellular level, compaction and filling of the voids formed with moisture. Accordingly, drying the extracted material at a moisture content of 110%, while the moisture content of freshly cut oak varies within 65%, is not an easy task.

Due to the lack of technology for industrial extraction and processing of bog oak, the poor technical equipment of enterprises, the extraction of bog oak, with very, very rare exceptions, has not brought positive results to date and has led to huge unforeseen financial costs and the irretrievable loss of excellent raw materials.

There are three ways to extract bog oak. The first method is very time-consuming and painstaking - this is the extraction of bog oak when performing bottom-dredging works by water transport enterprises. A no less time-consuming method of extraction is in the development of peat bogs.

In the first and second cases, serious equipment and maintenance personnel are involved, which has a very significant effect on the cost of the extracted bog oak, since according to the estimate for the extraction of bog oak by the BELVODPUT enterprise, the cost of extracting 1 m 3 of firewood is 220 US dollars. However, it should be noted that the volumes of bog oak production in these cases are difficult to predict and cannot serve as a basis for industrial production of bog oak.

The third extraction method is much more efficient and less expensive. It consists in the work of a specialized enterprise, consisting of a number of divisions equipped with modern equipment and environmentally friendly technology.

The main condition for the efficient extraction of bog oak is the creation of a specialized enterprise for the extraction and processing of bog oak, equipped with special equipment that allows you to perform all work efficiently and in the shortest possible time. Scientific and technological progress makes it possible to use the latest achievements in lifting, prospecting and lumber drying. Moreover, during the work of a specialized enterprise, it will be necessary to use means and equipment unusual for logging, for example, such as floating. means, electronic search equipment, scuba divers. A specialized enterprise, equipped with modern equipment, is able to effectively and fully use the navigation period, which allows not to produce more expensive bog oak extraction in the winter. A specialized enterprise is able, which is especially appreciated in the business world, to fulfill an order of any complexity and guarantee the supply of this valuable, high-quality material in the required volumes at any time and in the shortest possible time. And, of course, such an enterprise has the opportunity to create a stock of bog oak and lead the market for its trade. At the same time, it should be noted that all bog oak, when a specialized enterprise is created and it carries out planned work in all special areas, receives the status of a valuable raw material, with a predicted volume of its production. The established enterprise will be able to constantly monitor the position in the bog oak market and conduct a wide advertising campaign in order to conduct effective trading activities.

Specialized technical equipment of the enterprise allows in the shortest possible time to carry out seasonal exploration of bog oak reserves with fixing the location, to ensure prompt lifting and processing of bog oak. And modern advanced drying methods allow minimizing the loss of lumber. As a result, guaranteed industrial supplies of high-quality, most expensive lumber that meets the most stringent global requirements are possible. Moreover, it is especially important that a specialized enterprise is able to ensure the supply of bog oak both in the form of sawn timber and in the form of round timber (which is especially important for the manufacture of highly artistic, voluminous compositions) all year round. It should be noted that a specialized enterprise for the extraction of bog oak can successfully carry out its activities in the CIS countries, Poland, the Baltic countries, where, along with the main activity, it can effectively carry out work on the ecological cleaning of rivers and reservoirs. And what is important, such an enterprise is 70% equipped with Belarusian-made mechanisms and equipment. Those who have faced the problem of extracting bog oak know that extracting bog oak is not the main thing, the main thing is −

to produce high-quality drying of the extracted material. When saturated with water, bog oak wood retains its plasticity, but after drying it becomes much harder and more brittle than its natural state. The shrinkage of bog oak is 1.5 times greater than that of ordinary oak, which is explained by wrinkling (collapse) of cells with a reduced wall thickness, which is why bog oak wood cracks when dried more than usual. And, of course, this task becomes more complicated by more than one order when the issue of industrial (from 1000 m 3 ) extraction and processing of bog oak is solved. But in order to produce high-quality drying of bog oak roundwood at the initial stage, in contrast to simple wood, appropriate conditions are also required, and first of all, a specially equipped storage room adapted to work with overall, heavy objects, in which the necessary humidity and temperature settings. Storage of raised bog oak in the open air, even under a well-equipped shed, does not guarantee its high-quality drying, since it requires constant, labor-intensive maintenance of each specimen, and this is a difficult task on the scale of industrial production. When storing bog oak in specially equipped warehouses, the amount of work is significantly reduced. Without special costs, it is possible to bring the external and internal humidity in the logs to the range of 30-60%.

Currently, on the territory of the former USSR, bog oak in any form, from round timber to sawn timber, can be offered all year round by only one enterprise - GODO TRANS-CENTER, Republic of Belarus, Gomel.

To accomplish this task, the enterprise has worked out and tested the technology of storing bog oak. Specially equipped underground warehouses (5600 m 2 ) with constant temperature and humidity conditions are involved.

It is possible to cut bog oak directly at the place of lifting (the weight of 1 m 3 of lifted bog oak is from 1.5 tons), which can significantly reduce transport and storage costs. Raised oak immediately after lifting is not difficult to clean from sand, and due to the increased moisture content, it is much easier to saw. Bog oak, oversaturated with moisture, in the first days after sawing under appropriate conditions, significantly loses weight. It creates the possibility of rejecting substandard, damaged material. Quality material is sorted and preliminary preparation for drying is carried out.

At the same time, contracts were concluded with woodworking enterprises for the processing of bog oak from sawing and drying to the manufacture of lumber, furniture, and parquet. The results of practical cooperation with enterprises at all stages of the technological process have been obtained.

Processing was carried out both at state-owned enterprises and at private ones equipped with advanced equipment.

At present, the main activity of GODO "TRANS-CENTRE" is to finalize the technology of industrial extraction and processing of bog oak. The cycle from exploration, mining and processing to the manufacture of finished products - sawn timber, parquet, furniture - has been fully worked out. A technology has been developed for an effective, relatively inexpensive search for bog oak reserves. For example, the Russian enterprise RUSEXPORT, in order to carry out reconnaissance work, at the first stage uses aircraft equipment to conduct aerial photography of about 300 km of the river and obtain photographs, with the help of which the most probable bog oak deposits are analyzed, and then the results of underwater exploration are used. At the first stage, the specialists of GODO "TRANS-CENTER" analyze the distribution of floodplain oak forests in the proposed area of ​​work (from 1000 years ago or more) based on the data of the Belarusian Scientific Research Institute of Forestry. And after that, with the help of special equipment, exploration of bog oak reserves is carried out in a short time. Submariners are used only to ascertain the presence of bog oak and to carry out preparatory work to lift the discovered wood. As a result of applying the technology developed by GODO "TRANS-CENTER", one search group is able to explore 2170 kilometers of rivers in detail within one month. In other words, all navigable rivers of the Republic of Belarus, the length of which is 2700 km, can actually be examined for the presence of bog oak in one - maximum two months.

Having reliable, verified data on the accumulation of bog oak, it is possible to effectively use the capabilities of the water transport enterprises of our Republic, which, due to various circumstances, are currently not fully used. At the same time, using equipment produced in our Republic, it is possible to effectively extract bog oak in non-navigable rivers, the length of which is 39,000 km.

It should be noted that in parallel, it is possible to use the river cleanup program of our Republic, based on a fundamentally new approach, involving the development of eco-business, which will positively affect the ecological state of the rivers. The drift wood accumulated in the rivers made them unsuitable for recreation. It also affects the process of changing the course of rivers. According to the latest scientists, wood in the water is a source of phenols. As you know, this chemical is the strongest poison for humans, and especially for children. The process of decreasing biological and landscape diversity in the floodplains is growing every year. This problem can be solved by a local environmental program, which should be carried out by local authorities. But in the current situation, there are not enough funds in the local district budgets for this. Today's difficult environmental situation can only be resolved by a program that combines business and ecology. Attempts to solve environmental problems in the conditions of economic instability of society, in the absence of a self-financing mechanism and mutual interests of government and business circles, are doomed to failure.

Specialists of GODO "TRANS-CENTER" conducted marketing research on the subject of demand and the possibility of selling bog oak both in the CIS countries and in foreign countries. An analysis was made of the capabilities of enterprises, to some extent engaged in the extraction of bog oak, to ensure uninterrupted supplies of high-quality bog oak lumber. The real price of its quality material has been determined both at the moment and the estimated price for bog oak in the coming decades. Important factors influencing the demand, supply and price parameters of bog oak have been identified. A thorough analysis of legislative requirements in the field of extraction, processing and sale of bog oak, both in our Republic and in countries near and far abroad, was made.

Stained bog oak

Currently, you can often find offers to supply artificially stained bog oak, which surpasses natural bog oak in its physical and mechanical properties. Sellers guarantee impeccable color parameters of lumber. The price of such oak is slightly more expensive than processed natural oak. It is assumed that such material completely replaces natural bog oak, which is very expensive to extract and process and which requires a serious, qualified attitude. In fact, artificially stained bog oak only remotely resembles natural oak (as artificial honey resembles natural) and has a number of disadvantages. There are times when sellers, passing off wood of an indefinite color as artificial stained oak, cannot accurately, intelligibly answer the question of what color natural bog oak is.

There are major differences between stained oak and natural bog oak.

  1. Bog oak is a fossil material, it is fundamentally different from freshly sawn oak, because for a long time in a humid, airless environment, completely different processes occur in it related to the transformation of internal energy.
  2. Natural bog oak used to grow in ecologically absolutely healthy, pre-industrial conditions, which makes it possible to produce environmentally friendly products from it, which are currently in high demand and attention.
  3. Stocks of natural bog oak are limited and irreplaceable.
  4. The vast majority of known products from bog oak are of cultural and historical value.
  5. Currently, there are dozens of methods for staining oak, birch (including Karelian) and others. Basically, chemicals and elements are used for staining wood, the use of which in the future can have a negative impact on the consumer. The quality of the processing of such wood is also questionable. And definitely - a specialist in external and internal features will always distinguish natural bog oak from artificial stained oak.
  6. At present, mainly 50-100-year-old oak wood is being processed, that is, wood that has been fully exposed to technogenic factors at the cellular level.

A special line should be noted the absolute absurdity of the production and use of natural bog oak veneer, since one of the main advantages of bog oak, as we noted earlier, is its irreplaceability in nature, and for coating lumber made using synthetic resins, as well as plastics, it is quite you can successfully use veneer from any lumber treated with paints and varnishes, including bog oak.

The situation with the extraction, processing and sale of bog oak at the moment

With the advent of new market relations in the countries of the former USSR, attempts were made to extract bog oak everywhere. Everything seemed very simple. There are a lot of logs in all rivers, the labor force is cheap - take a tractor, a truck, take the first log that comes across in the river to the sawmill, or you can bypass the sawmill and immediately send it to the West. And in the early years, there were indeed frequent cases of lifting and storing large volumes of wood on the shore, which by the end of summer lost all its unique properties. There were cases of sending large volumes of the so-called bog oak to the West. In those days, it was necessary to observe the loading for sending abroad logs, which were lifted from the water a few days ago onto railway platforms, which were wet from the water flowing from them. Or sawing logs at the collective farm sawmill, when, despite the fact that water oozes from the boards in a stream, they are stacked in open air. But things did not go further, since the issue of lifting and processing bog oak on an industrial scale turned out to be many orders of magnitude more difficult than expected. Firewood, whose moisture content is from 110%, was lifted from the river and unloaded onto the shore. Under the influence of sunlight, summer heat, the wood completely deteriorated in a few weeks. That wood, which was sent by unprepared transport, also fell into disrepair. Due to the lack of technology for industrial production and, most importantly, the processing of bog oak, the presence of only superficial knowledge of the properties of fuel wood, including bog oak, absolutely all enterprising people engaged in this type of activity suffered significant financial losses, which for a long time discouraged them from desire to run this business. At the same time, Western partners, instead of the promised high-quality material of vaunted bog oak, received substandard, destroyed material, which also discouraged them for a long time from dealing with bog oak. Thus, within 3-5 years, a large-scale anti-advertising work was carried out on the vast territory of the former Soviet Union with the involvement of Western potential investors and a huge number of responsible employees of water transport enterprises and enterprising people.

The result of this company was the complete discrediting of bog oak as a unique, the most expensive in the price range, environmentally friendly, irreplaceable lumber.

Ten years later, the situation has changed radically. In 1996-1997, scientists from MarSTU developed a program and methodology for studying the composition of sunken wood in water bodies of the Mari El Republic based on the standard methodology of TsNIILesoplav, MLTI and BTI. Planned studies of the volumes of sunken timber in the Republic have begun in order to organize industrial production. In September 2002, at a session of the Regional Coordinating Council for Timber Science, held at the Bryansk State Academy of Engineering and Technology, in which about 90 representatives of educational, research, expert and other organizations took part, for the first time since 1947, the terms “fuel wood” were discussed in detail. ” and “bog oak”, agreed versions of their definitions have been developed. Professor E.M. Runova (Bratsk State Technical University) reported on the properties of firewood. New advanced technologies and equipment for wood processing have appeared, and the range of effective search tools has expanded. In the countries of the former USSR, a real market has appeared, which lives and develops according to well-known market laws. More and more free funds are being discovered and fewer unoccupied economic areas. And accordingly, such a resource as bog oak will soon be in demand.

Stocks of bog oak are limited and irreplaceable. The use of valuable bog oak as firewood in the age of scientific and technological progress is an unaffordable, criminal luxury, bordering on an anti-state attitude towards the country's natural resources.

A. A. Dupanov

GODO "TRANS-CENTER",
247001, st. River 8a, Chonki settlement,
Gomel, Republic of Belarus.
t / f (375 232) 96 13 89, 55 90 82, 55 93 77.

Bog oak is a precious wood material with silver-gray noble veins that has absorbed history. For centuries and millennia, sunken oak trunks have been at the bottom of reservoirs, where, without access to air, in the process of staining, they gradually acquired strength that is not inferior to stone.

Nature itself, having given bog oak its durability and unique color scheme, has determined its unique properties. You can't find a more beautiful wood texture. That is why a significant difference between bog oak products is that neither dyes nor varnishes are used in their manufacture. The color of the wood speaks for itself: delicate pale shades indicate the age of staining at 300-400 years, and the black color is acquired over more than 1000 years of staining.

In historical descriptions, one can find the name of bog oak as "ebony" and "iron tree". Such names are due to the properties of wood, but we are talking about oak aged under water. It is characteristic that in Russia there was no concept of "cabinet worker" - craftsmen working with elite wood were called precisely "cabinet makers". And today, following the age-old traditions of the craftsmen, they respect the natural originality of each piece of material they work with, revealing and presenting its best qualities. Therefore, bog oak is used today not only and not so much as a finishing material, but also as a source of inspiration for creating genuine works of art. How to recreate the effect of bog oak when processing wood can be found in the article "".


"Bog oak" (the name comes from the French "marais" - swamp), commonly calledblack, is oak wood, mineralized with metal salts in natural conditions. For many hundreds of years, due to erosion of the banks and changes in the course of rivers, coastal oak groves were under water. Under the influence of tannin (gallotannic acid), the wood changes its chemical composition there.


As a result, bog oak has acquired unique physical properties: strength, durability, unique colors. Since all tree trunks are in different conditions, each log acquires a unique composition and color. Depending on the amount of metal salts (mainly iron) contained in the river water and the amount of tannins contained in the wood, oak was colored from pinkish to black.


The tone and intensity of the color depended on natural conditions, as well as on the time of mineralization. To acquire black wood, it takes, on average, from 1000 to 2000 years. The formation of an oak deposit consists of several necessary conditions: the presence of oak forests on the shore, the speed of the river flow, favorable for the process of mineralization, the saturation of water with metal salts, a certain composition of river alluvium and the time factor. From this it follows that bog oak is a truly unique material, since the probability of joining all of the above factors is quite small.


It is impossible to say when bog oak was first discovered, but the history associated with it is impressive. One of the legends says that the walls of the fortress, erected by Prince Rurik on the shores of Lake Ilmen in the 9th century AD, were made from this tree, and is considered one of the first fortifications in Russia. There are also undeniable facts that thrones for the rulers of imperial powers were made from bog oak. And there is evidence of this: the throne of King James II in Great Britain or the throne of Peter I, made by English craftsmen as a gift to the sovereign. The miraculous properties of bog oak interested Peter so much that he ordered “... to catch this wood, and strict accounting for the trunks…” Later, in 1712, he presented Ekaterina Alekseevna with a box of bog oak as one of the wedding gifts.


Presenting gifts from "ebony" on especially solemn occasions subsequently became a tradition that continued until the revolution. Cabinets, armchairs, bureaus were presented for anniversaries and official appointments. Caskets, caskets, figurines were presented to the ladies at the wedding and on the day of the angel.And the bog oak decoration of the premises clearly testified not only to the viability of a person, but also to his weight in society. Since this material has always been elite, and access to it had to be earned.


To the share of the traditions of extraction and manufacture of products from bog oak during the last century there have been many trials. Since the resources of this material are not unlimited, there are practically no reserves of bog oak left in Europe. Therefore, before the revolution, the material mined in Russia was mainly supplied to Europe, where interiors were created in the royal courts - stairs, railings and other parts of the decor of the houses of the august persons were decorated with bog oak.


For a long time, bog oak has been developed in an artisanal way: the trunks were found in the water by prospectors and pulled to the surface almost by hand. Later, an industrial method for the extraction of this elite material was also developed; it was used by the Moscow-Kazan Railway joint-stock company. Then, due to the outbreak of the First World War, the extraction of bog oak had to be closed, and all contracts with the Europeans were canceled. Later, the development of deposits was revived with varying success.


In February 1948, by a decree of the party and the government of the USSR, the process of extraction and processing of bog oak was recognized as unprofitable, as a result of which the Saransk Republican Office, the only enterprise dealing with bog oak in the USSR, was abolished. Thus, in Russia, despite centuries of experience in the extraction and processing of this material, bog oak was "crossed out of the list" for a period of about 60 years.


Today, the lost is reborn. Although it is available only to experienced professionals. This is a very complex and lengthy process that requires a lot of labor and resources. Previously, before the start of the season, experts explore several hundred kilometers of river beds, analyzing the features of the banks, the speed of the current, the depth and composition of the river bottom. In places of alleged deposits, at different depths, scuba divers literally touch the bottom of the river in search of sunken trunks, dig out the area around found oaks in order to be able to get ashore using modern technical means. Further, the raw materials are processed, transported, sorted and dried. And only after 3 years of drying the material is selected for further processing.


Bog oak is a very capricious material, capable of losing its original beauty and properties in just a few hours in the open air, being left “without an eye”. The oak trunk must be cut within a few days, otherwise it becomes unusable. This is one of its features known only to blacksmiths.

Even ordinary wood requires drying. And the process of drying bog oak is a long and painstaking work that cannot fail: after all, if the wood is not properly dried, its internal stresses will sooner or later turn into cracks. Bog oak must be dried in conditions close to natural: a little dry air, a little wind, a little humidity - everything is like in nature, only this is provided in a special room. Moreover, after the completion of the drying process, which lasts for several years, only a minimum percentage of the total extracted wood biomass remains suitable for further manufacture of products. The resulting material is carefully selected and sorted by geometric dimensions, color, density, texture for the subsequent creation of unique works.

It is not surprising that products from bog oak, due to the exceptional complexity of processing the wood itself, can only be made by true experts in their field. At the same time, they are directly interested in their reputation, and a self-respecting manufacturer accompanies its products with a certificate that serves as a guarantor of quality and authenticity.

Based on site materialswww.bogoak.ru

Stained wood is a tree that has lain in water for many years, while gaining incredible beauty and strength.

Everyone knows that there are valuable tree species, but there are more affordable ones, such as pine or spruce. But there is a very special category of wood - stained. This is a tree that, having lain in the water for tens, hundreds, thousands of years, acquires incredible beauty and strength. Let's talk about stained wood.

Stained wood - incredible beauty and strength

Trunks and fragments of trees lying under water are commonly called driftwood. A logical name, given that the tree really turns out to be drowned, has been at the bottom of the sea, lake, river, swamp for decades. It is noteworthy that some trunks at the same time turn into dust, rot and, of course, cannot be used. But other trees, on the contrary, acquire a truly stone strength.

The most valuable stained wood is oak. This royal tree is already valued for its strength and beautiful texture. Having lain under water for at least 300 years, the oak acquires delicate pale shades. If the tree is black, then it has lain in the reservoir for about 1000 years!

In the pre-industrial era, “black gold” was not called oil at all, but bog oak. Products from it are almost eternal, not subject to rotting, fungus or mold. They do not need a protective coating, and stained wood looks extraordinarily beautiful.

In addition to oak, larch is considered the most valuable stained wood. This is not surprising. It is these tree species that, due to their high density, sink, sink to the bottom, where a transformation process takes place under a layer of silt or sand. Even in fresh water there are salts that interact with the tannins of wood and help it acquire special hardness and strength.

According to experts, in order for a tree to really become stained, it must lie under water for at least 40 years. In general, the longer the better, experts say. The stagnant waters of swamps or lakes are ideal places to obtain stained wood. But a tree that has lain in sea water, soaked in salt, will also be no less durable.


Literally anything can be made from stained wood: furniture, parquet, various crafts, figurines and figurines, caskets, billiard cues, pipes, other interior items and even jewelry. There are no drawbacks to this material, but it is not available to everyone. Stained wood, especially oak and larch, is very expensive! There are several good reasons for this:

  • First, it is a rare material. Although, as calculated at the Central Research Institute of Timber Rafting, approximately 1% of the entire floated volume sinks in the process of transporting tree trunks, and about 9 million m3 of drift wood has accumulated in the Volga basin. That's a lot, you say. But finding sunken trunks is not easy. In addition, only 50% of all sunken wood can be classified as commercial, that is, suitable for further use. And oak among driftwood is no more than 5%. In Europe, the search for and lifting of flooded trees has been done for a long time and purposefully, so it is already very difficult to find driftwood in European countries. Russia still has reserves of this material;
  • Secondly, it is technically difficult to raise a tree to the surface. Special equipment is needed, usually the help of scuba divers is required. The wood becomes heavy, you can’t get a solid trunk by hand;
  • Thirdly, it is not enough to get a firewood. It also needs to be dried before use. It takes about a year, and in no case should the process be accelerated, drying should occur naturally;
  • Fourthly, it is difficult to process a tree that has become very durable; special skills and tools are needed. Not all carpenters take up work with bog oak.

Therefore, for three kilograms of bog black oak on the Internet they often ask about 2 thousand rubles! Or 200 rubles for one small piece, literally a cube, suitable only for cutting, for example, a knife handle. And a finished comb made of bog oak, such as shown in the photo above, will cost more than 12 thousand rubles.

You can imagine how much a parquet made of such material or a kitchen set will cost. Experts compare the cost of a good bog oak log with the price of a car. Cheaper bog birch, pine, aspen - they ask from 1.5 to 20 thousand rubles per cubic meter, depending on the condition and quality of the wood.

With such prices for stained wood, it is not surprising that manufacturers of furniture and interior items achieve similarity with the help of stains and special impregnations. Yes, this is already an imitation, in terms of strength and hardness such a tree does not differ from the usual one, but the color becomes darker, nobler, the structure is emphasized.

Stained wood is an elite material. Only for expensive interiors, yacht decoration, exclusive car interiors, furniture that is in the offices of presidents and heads of large companies.published

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If you have any questions on this topic, ask them to specialists and readers of our project.

Humidity is determined using a special device - a moisture meter. There is another way. To determine the moisture content of wood, an alcohol solution of iodine is applied with a brush to a fresh chipped flake from the workpiece. If the tree is harvested in winter (less damp), then the veins will acquire a dark purple hue, if in summer (more damp) - yellowish. However, it is difficult to determine the moisture content of a knotty blank in this way, since the presence of knots will enhance the “sound” of the wood.
The best way to determine the moisture content of wood is by the chips removed from the workpiece with a jointer. The wood will be damp if thin and long chips can be tied into a knot, and dry if the chips break.
The density of wood can be determined by the degree of saturation of its moisture. So, in order to select a high-quality oak board, samples of several boards of the same size are placed in water for several hours, after which they are weighed. The heaviest specimen will be of the lowest quality, since it has absorbed a lot of water, which means that its wood is less dense than the rest.
The juices that the tree feeds on during its growth contain many different salts. When the wood dries, they remain in the pores of the checkered structure of the tree, where, under certain conditions, moisture with air also enters. This contributes to the decay of the material of the blanks. To get rid of salts, workpieces with a load are lowered onto a clean river bottom with a butt against the current. After a certain time (usually 7-8 months), the water will wash out all the salts from the wood. After drying, the wood becomes very durable, almost does not warp or crack. It should be remembered that not every tree can be freed from salts in this way, since many species rot in a humid environment. Therefore, only those species that are hardy to stay in a humid environment are subject to leaching: oak, pine, alder, yew and some others.

Do-it-yourself artificial aging of wood

Bog oak is a lumber obtained from black oak with a purple tint (popularly known as "blue wing" or "anthracite") and subtle silver veins. He was in a humid environment without access to oxygen according to radiocarbon analysis of 800 years.

material bog oak technology its extraction is quite heavy and the processing of bog oak is associated with a number of difficulties. It should be immediately taken into account that the bog oak, from the moment it enters the water until it rises, withstands many thousands of cycles of alternating physical and climatic loads. Imagine a mighty oak fallen into the river, which for many years firmly holds its roots to the high bank. Meter by meter, for many years the crown of the tree and the trunk itself are immersed in water.

There are three ways to extract bog oak. The first method is very time-consuming and painstaking - this is the extraction of bog oak when performing bottom-dredging works by water transport enterprises. A no less time-consuming method of extraction is in the development of peat bogs. The third extraction method is much more efficient and less expensive. It consists in the work of a specialized enterprise, consisting of a number of divisions equipped with modern equipment and environmentally friendly technology.

Bog oak is usually huge, so it is possible to cut bog oak directly at the place of lifting (the weight of 1 m3 of lifted bog oak is from 1.5 tons), which can significantly reduce transport and storage costs. Raised oak immediately after lifting is not difficult to clean from sand, and due to the increased moisture content, it is much easier to saw.


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Deciduous trees and their use in construction

The most important in carpentry are not conifers, but hardwoods. Of the variety of hardwoods, oak should be distinguished first of all.
Oak is distinguished by high strength, hardness, resistance to decay, ability to bend, has a beautiful texture and color. On the tangential section, the pores are clearly visible, and on the radial section, large core rays. The sapwood of the oak is clearly separated from the core in a light tone. Oak wood has sufficient viscosity and is well processed by a cutting tool. After lying in the water for several decades, it acquires a silky dark purple color with a greenish tint (under the "crow's wing"). Its hardness is higher than dry wood, but its brittleness is also higher. Processing bog oak is difficult. Having a lot of tannins, oak wood is well pickled. The bark of a young oak serves as a source of tannins. In a decoction of a mixture of crushed bark and oak trunk shavings, wood of other species is kept and thus saturated with tannins. Soaked in such a broth and saturated with tannins, the wood is well pickled in solutions of metal salts, acquiring the necessary color. Oak wood is widely used for the manufacture of furniture, parquet, arts and crafts, as well as in cooperage. Oak veneer is used for facing low-value species, plywood, chipboard, etc. Oak is used in mosaic work and for large carvings; for small profiles it is inexpressive. Oak wood does not accept alcohol varnishes and varnishes well, but sticks well. Ash wood is similar to oak, although it does not have pronounced core rays. When discolored, it acquires a shade of gray hair. It bends well after steaming. When drying, ash cracks a little; due to its high viscosity and strength, wood is difficult to process. Ash is easily damaged by a wormhole, so its wood is subjected to antiseptic treatment. The sapwood of the ash tree is clearly separated from the core. Its texture is beautiful, brownish-yellow. In adverse conditions (humidity, dampness), ash quickly rots. Flexible and durable, ash wood is recommended for making home sports equipment - gymnastic walls, gymnastic boards, as well as railings, tool handles, etc. Due to low frictional resistance, ash is not recommended for cutting tool blocks. Ash is poorly polished; requires, like oak, pore-filling. For ash, a decorative coating with nitro-lacquers or waxing is recommended. Due to frequent outgrowths on the trunk and a pronounced texture, ash wood is widely used in mosaic work.
Beech has a strong and hard wood; in terms of strength, it is not inferior to oak. In its pure form, beech does not have a pronounced texture, but on tangential and radial cuts, its wood is very beautiful and these decorative qualities are used when veneering furniture with planed veneer. Beech is hygroscopic, so it is not used for products that are in a humid environment. The wood dries quickly and does not crack. Beech is easily pricked, sawn and processed with a cutting tool; bends well when steamed; hard to polish. The use of beech in carpentry is varied: from planer blocks to solid wood furniture. The wood is successfully used in carving, although it has a high hardness, as well as in mosaic work. It is well finished with nitro and polyester varnishes, waxing, dyed in various solutions and bleached.
Hornbeam is also called white beech. It has a hard, strong and dense wood of a whitish-gray color. The texture of the hornbeam does not differ in brightness, as, for example, in ash; light dots are scattered on an evenly matte background of its wood. Often this breed has a slanting structure of wood, so the hornbeam is pricked with difficulty. The sapwood does not have a large pinkish color with slight deviations in tone with redness or browning. Its wood is moderately hard and dense, well finished, polished and processed with a cutting tool, but it warps strongly. In mosaic works, it is used for sets of portraits, landscapes and geometric ornaments. In carpentry, it is used to make blocks for hand tools.
The chestnut has several varieties; of these, the most famous are the edible and horse chestnuts. Due to its softness and uniformity, edible chestnut is used in carpentry and carving. In its structure, this breed is somewhat similar to oak and ash, but in the radial section it does not have the luster of core rays characteristic of oak. Horse chestnut is obliquely layered and resembles pine in a grayish color; has strong wood and thanks to tannins it is well etched in solutions. It is used in carpentry and mosaic work in the form of sliced ​​veneer.
Rowan has a hard, dense, fine-grained wood, which is successfully used for the manufacture of handles for percussion carpentry tools and planer blocks. Only well-dried wood is used in business. The texture of rowan is weakly expressed. Karagach is a hard, strong and dense breed that is well finished and polished. Due to its beautiful texture, its wood is used in mosaics and carpentry, especially in the manufacture of fine furniture. Burls often form on tree trunks, which are widely used as veneers in mosaic sets.
Plane tree and plane tree (eastern plane tree) grow, like elm, in the south of our country. Their core color is brownish-brown. In the radial section, they give a beautiful pattern of wood fibers, which is successfully used in mosaic work. These rocks are moderately hard; processing them with a cutting tool due to the oblique layer is difficult; wood polishes well.
Fruit trees (plum, cherry, sweet cherry, apricot) and some shrubs (lilac, buckthorn, hawthorn, hazel, broom, cotoneaster, barberry, etc.) are used for the manufacture of small joinery. As a rule, their wood is thin-layered, hard, of various color shades - from white-pink to purple in the core parts of the trunks. The wood of fruit trees is well polished, painted and pickled in chemical solutions. Many of the shrubs (barberry, buckthorn, cotoneaster, broom, hawthorn, etc.) are used as dyes. To do this, use their shavings, bark and sawdust.
Teak and rosewood are imported as sliced ​​veneers for furniture veneer. Teak has a monotonous texture of a light brownish chocolate color, rosewood has a very beautiful texture with a purple-brown background, along which black and dark brown stripes run. Their narrow sapwood is light yellow. Teak wood is easy to cut, but rosewood is very difficult. These breeds have a specific smell, similar to the smell of dried, prunes. Polyester lacquer does not bond well with them, especially with rosewood, which, more than teak, releases essential oils that accumulate in places with a black tint. Red, ebony (black), lemon wood and some other species are also imported into our country.

Features of oak wood and its application

Do-it-yourself wood aging video

Oak density=700 kg/cu.m.
hardness=3.7-3.9

Istari is the most popular material in Russia for the manufacture of joinery and furniture products. It is widely distributed not only in Europe, but also in Asia, as well as in America. At the same time, not everyone knows that oak belongs to the beech family and includes about two hundred varieties, and its strong, durable and resistant to external influences wood can be from light to yellowish brown, but subsequently darkens somewhat, and therefore oak furniture acquires over the years, a characteristic noble appearance.
Oak does not tolerate accelerated drying (in which its wood can crack).
Several varieties grow in our country, but the most common summer oak is the pedunculate oak.
Oak wood is hard, heavy, characterized by high strength and decay resistance, beautiful texture and color. Greenish-brown, with a powerful rough pattern of fibers, and the light parts of the wood are distinguished by a special strength and some kind of bone sheen.
Oak is easily machined, well finished and bends, used for carving and in interior design. It is used in carpentry, furniture, cooperage and plywood industries.
In the furniture industry, bog oak is valued, which has a dark gray color.
Naturally stained oak is obtained from oak trunks that have been in river water for a long time (hundreds of years).
Bog oak is characterized by increased hardness.

Color and gloss of wood - description and characteristics

The color palette of wood species has almost all shades of the spectrum, and variations of these shades include countless tonal ratios. One breed can have several dozen.
The color of wood is one of the signs by which one type of wood differs from another. The wood of linden, pine, birch, maple, aspen is light, oak and ash is brown, walnut, teak is brownish, etc. If we compare the wood of pine and oak, we can say that it is light yellow in pine, in oak - gray-brown. But in both cases, the coloring and tannins that are in its cells give the color to the wood. Breeds with warm shades of colors (ocher, brown, red-brown, yellow, orange) are more common, less often with cold ones (green, blue, purple).
Under the influence of atmospheric conditions, the color of wood can change: within each climatic zone, wood of the same species has its own color shade. The color of wood is also affected by light and air: over time, the grain of the wood darkens. So, cut down alder becomes reddish after a while. To a certain extent, the color of the wood is changed by fungal lesions, as well as mineral salts in the ground, the environment of the tree (its darkening from the sun), etc. The wood is darker towards the butt, and lighter towards the top. With age, all trees also darken the wood. All this must be taken into account in carpentry and especially mosaic work, where texture and color act as a pictorial element when revealing a plot or image.
The color shades of various species can be classified into main groups, where one color of wood will prevail:
yellow - birch, spruce, linden, aspen, hornbeam, maple, fir, ash (whitish yellow with light shades of pink and red), barberry (lemon yellow), mulberry (golden yellow), hawthorn, Karelian birch, bird cherry ( reddish brownish yellow), ailanthus (pinkish yellow);
brown - cedar, poplar, elm kernel (light brown), beech, larch, alder, pear, plum (reddish-pinkish-brown), chestnut, mountain ash (brown-brown), acacia (yellow-brown), Anatolian walnut ( greenish brown);
brown - cherry (yellowish brown), apple tree (yellowish-pinkish-light brown), apricot, walnut (light (dark) brown);
red - yew, mahogany;
pink - laurel cherry (yellowish pink), plane tree (dark pink);
orange - buckthorn;
purple - lilac, privet (core);
black - bog oak, ebony;
greenish - persimmon, pistachio.
The brilliance of wood is its property to reflect the light flux. Different breeds have different luster; to a large extent, this property is manifested in beech, maple, plane trees, white acacia. Poplar, linden, aspen, teak have a matte (satin) sheen; silky - willow, elm, ash, bird cherry; golden - cherry; silver - Siberian cedar; moire - birch, gray maple, laurel cherry.
The brilliance of wood depends not only on the presence and size of the core rays, but also on the nature of their placement along the cuts: the larger the core rays (for example, in oak) and the denser the wood, i.e., the more densely the core rays are located (for example, in maple ), the more significant will be the shine of the wood. The distribution of gloss over the surface is not the same and depends on the type of cut: in the radial plane it is stronger, in the transverse plane it is weaker.
Chiaroscuro overflows in some rocks are clearly visible only in the longitudinal section of the trunk, in others - in all sections. They significantly affect the decorative qualities of wood, enhancing or weakening its expressive sound, so the shine of wood is taken into account when compiling mosaic sets.


Repair

Coniferous wood species.

Pine is the most common coniferous tree. The color of its wood can be brown, reddish, yellowish and almost white with slight stains of red. The best material is obtained from those trees that grow on hills, dry hills, sandstones; their annual layers are located close to each other, and the wood has a dense structure. The structure of pine wood growing in humid places is looser. When dry, pine is light and pliable for carpentry work. Along the fibers, it is planed well, across - with difficulty, and sawn across - well, along - badly. Pine wood sticks well. Furniture is made from it (for this, natural wood with a beautiful, pronounced texture is selected), frames of carpentry structures and structures for facing with sliced ​​veneer of valuable species. Pine is widely used for the manufacture of doors, windows, flooring, etc. Wood is well processed with dyes and varnishes after deresining. Pine is also used for mosaics and carvings.
Spruce is softer than pine, but it has a large number of small and medium knots, which makes it difficult to use it in critical carpentry structures. The texture of its wood is inexpressive. Spruce is less moisture resistant than pine, and is more likely to rot, but its wood is not very susceptible to warping, which is a positive quality of this material. Spruce gets off badly, but sticks together better than pine. It is widely used in mosaic sets due to its knotty texture. In carpentry, it is mainly used for non-critical furniture designs that do not experience heavy loads during operation.
Larch occupies a special place among other conifers. Its wood has a reddish-brownish, sometimes brownish tint and is highly durable (stronger than oak) and moisture resistant. Dry larch wood is processed well, although during long-term processing of parts, the sole of the tool becomes tarred. Larch is not very susceptible to warping, but with rapid drying, internal cracks may occur in the wood of the trunk. For finishing larch, mainly nitrocellulose varnishes are used. The breed is used in carpentry and mosaic work, used for the manufacture of carved products.
Cedar has a whitish-yellow wood with different color shades depending on where it grows. Cedar wood is not distinguished by high density and strength, it is resistant to decay, it is not very susceptible to wormholes, it has a strong specific smell, and it pricks well. In carpentry, it is used for products that are not subjected to heavy loads. Polishing of cedar wood is used little, it is finished mainly with wax. Cedar wood, like larch, is well processed by a cutting tool. Cedar is a good material for carving.
Juniper is a coniferous shrub, the trunk diameter of which reaches 10 cm. Its strong thin-layer wood is well processed and polished, and has a specific pleasant smell. Juniper is used in carpentry for the manufacture of small parts, for turning, for carving and mosaic work.
Cypress and thuja are similar in properties to juniper, but their wood is broader and darker in tone. They are used for small carvings. Cypress does not crack or warp.
Yew has red-brown wood with dark and light veins. The sapwood is light, almost white. Yew wood is strong and hard with a significant number of knots on the trunk. It is almost not exposed to a wormhole and is little sensitive to atmospheric changes. Planed and polished well; looks great, especially black. In carpentry, yew wood finds a variety of uses; it is a good carving material; yew veneer is valued in mosaic work.
Siberian fir is used on a par with spruce, although it has reduced physical and mechanical properties.

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Long-term natural processes contribute to the transformation of the tree species. By this concept, one can mean not only negative influencing qualities, but also positive ones. As a result of being under water for tens, hundreds of years, and even millennia, oak trunks acquire invaluable qualities, becoming extremely hard and getting a unique color of a singed or even blackish tint.

Under water, the integrity of the oak is preserved due to a unique characteristic - the presence of a special tannin in it.

Bog oak is a component of a refined and expensive interior.

Features of the passage of the reaction

Changes in the physical and mechanical characteristics of wood associated with the passage of complex chemical reactions: the leaching of water-soluble substances contained in the cell walls. The process has been proven by the results of numerous studies conducted by N. T. Kuznetsov back in the 30s of the last century.

As a result, it was possible to establish that stained wood contains 75% less water-soluble substances than natural wood. This indicates an increase in the porosity of the cells and a decrease in their density, which as a result leads to an increase in the moisture content of the saturation limit, balancing the shrinkage, maximum moisture. It is this factor that explains the absolute shrinkage of boards or blanks during the drying of the sawn material.

The analysis data contributed to the development of thought and the formation of a new technology for drying wood and blanks made from it with a thickness of up to 22-32 mm in a convective or convective-microwave dryer.

The use of advanced technologies has resolved the issue with the temperature treatment of wood. Internal and external cracking is practically absent. Collapse in such cases is unacceptable.

The interesting concepts put forward by researchers and scientists do not end there. The study of properties is in the process of processing geoanalysis data and continues its evolution in the world.

Features of extraction and processing of oak

The process is complex and time-consuming, and not every specialist can handle wood. Despite this, the products deserve the highest praise due to their qualities.

Important! If you intend to process or decorate the surface with stained wood, then try to prepare the material in advance. It takes more than one year to process a tree.

To obtain such valuable material, water areas of significant volumes are examined, especially the bottom of reservoirs. At the same time, the work is carried out in very difficult conditions.

How is a tree brought to the surface?

Having found the trunk, the bog oak is raised ashore. In this case, one cannot do without the use of technology, since one tree weighs in the region of 10-20 tons. Before proceeding with the sawing of the material, the wood pulled out of the water at the first stage is evaluated for quality. Sometimes a tree that has been taken out of the water and prepared for processing is completely unsuitable for further work. As soon as the material is sawn, immediately proceed to the manufacture of parquet, furniture, doors or window frames. Untreated stained wood, aged under water for many years, quickly becomes unusable on the surface. Therefore, it must be processed immediately. As you have probably already noticed, the extraction of bog oak is a labor-intensive process.

Scope of application of the material

Even if you have never heard of such a material, you can imagine that this type of wood is used in not one, but at least five applications.

Due to the fact that bog oak is quite rare and even more valuable material, it involves manual fine processing.

Most often, furniture, souvenirs are made from wood, which are doomed to turn into antique items. It is worth noting that the floor or other types of coatings used in interior design have a long service life.

Is it possible to produce bog oak in artificial conditions?

Thanks to the development of innovations and the movement of technological progress, it is possible to change the natural characteristics, properties and performance of natural wood. Today, scientists manage to successfully imitate the color of stained wood, while maintaining aesthetic and durable characteristics, achieving maximum moisture resistance.

As an option - oak staining at home. This option is simple and affordable and is ideal for those who want an unusual oak material with silver veins inside.

To do this, a stain is useful - a special mixture that imitates the color of a natural moraine of a wood species.

The product is applied in two stages: the first time on the surface of the tree under a slight slope, drawing strokes across the fibers, the second time along. During work, they use a flat wide brush - a flute, intended for applying stain and simulating imperceptible natural tone transitions. This is the best tool, characterized by softness and at the same time elasticity of the pile. Stains are often used to mimic the "bog oak" shade for laminate flooring.

What is included in wood stain?

Impregnation is made on the basis of three components:

  1. Water. Water-based formulations absorb better and are more readily absorbed by the wood species. During processing, the wood needs to be dried, which takes more time. The result is a uniform shade that is easy to correct with a sponge. After waiting for the material to dry completely, it is covered with paintwork materials.
  2. Ethyl alcohol. It lends itself to instant evaporation, therefore it requires high-quality and quick application and caution in actions. Work with such impregnation only in special gloves and a mask. Otherwise, it will not be possible to achieve uniform tinting of the material. Therefore, the masters prefer not to work manually, but using special equipment - an airbrush.
  3. Alkidov. In addition to obtaining wood in the desired shade, alkyd stain allows you to increase the resistance of the material to external negative factors affecting the material. Therefore, the coating of the product with varnish can be missed, except for shine.

Remember that home-dyed raw materials are easy to distinguish from natural bog oak. Therefore, artificial material is often used in baths, saunas, swimming pools, and other rooms with high humidity.

Why is stained wood popular?

Back in the days when man had just begun to explore the Earth, the tree took a reliable allied position as the first available material. No matter how the conditions and the development of scientific and technological progress develop, natural wood has always been in demand, and this trend will remain leading for more than one century. Environmentally friendly wood is not only safe, but also gives the room a special charm and comfort.

Considering that ordinary wood has become not so interesting in recent years compared to other progressive materials, it's time to collect laurels from bog wood. In terms of strength characteristics, the material resembles a stone due to the properties obtained during the period of stay under water.

The color of bog oak is not the main advantage that makes the material preferable in choice. Stale wood is not afraid of cold, moisture, or pests that destroy hectares of forest. The stained material does not require specific care or additional processing. At the same time, it remains the standard of naturalness, environmental friendliness, purity.

How does it happen that the result is stained wood?

The whole secret is in tannins, which, as a result of the formation of compounds with iron salts, are transformed into heavy-duty and durable. Stained oak boards can be called a newly reborn material with unique characteristics.

Interesting! The timber was rafted naturally along major rivers throughout the world. The banks of the rivers were strengthened, and when the trunks fell into the water, they remained there for natural processing by the elements of nature. 90% percent have already been recycled, but some of the trees were covered with silt, and have remained under water to this day, acquiring even greater value.

The use of stained wood in construction

Guess why such a house will not be afraid of snow, rain, windy or frosty weather. All thanks to the “school of survival” passed by the wood at the bottom of the bay, polynya, lake, pond or other body of water where it was located.

The main advantage of building from stained wood is environmental friendliness. It is difficult to imagine an even more natural material for constructing a residential building. Bog oak siding looks interesting.

The absence of shrinkage during the drying process also makes it a unique material ideal for construction. The newly built housing is completely ready for operation without risks to human life and health.

Stained wood in the interior

To create a unique style often use:

  • larch;
  • birch;

The only requirements for the material used in interior decoration are environmental friendliness and aesthetics, and bog oak products fully fill these requirements. Often in mansions you can find bog oak parquet, which looks unsurpassed.

No fungi or insects are afraid of wooden buildings of this type. Therefore, such a coating does not imply additional treatment with protective agents, and this is another plus for the environmental friendliness of the house.

The price of wood starts from 12,500 rubles per 1m 3. It does not matter how much bog oak costs, the main thing is that the material is of high quality.

Manufacture of stained wood furniture

For such purposes, best suited:

  • larch;
  • Birch.

Describing furniture made of bog oak, a simple name is appropriate - "exclusive material". The tone and texture of natural wood is unique. Color depth varies from light gray to black-blue tones, from pale pink to amber hues.

Interesting! Masters compare the pattern of cuts of bog oak with a map of the starry sky - the same unimaginably beautiful picture.

Unmistakably, such furniture is an unobtrusive, but pronounced sign of the taste and specific level of well-being of the owner of the house.

Manufacture of stained wood products

Products made from natural wood species that have undergone centuries-old natural processing are widespread on the market. From the bog forest produce:

  • stairs of any shape;
  • windows "bog oak" (shade);
  • window sills;
  • furniture boards;
  • flooring;
  • Wall panels;
  • tinted doors "bog oak";
  • siding and other materials for outdoor construction and home improvement.

Bog wood is an interesting solution for creating a Scandinavian-style room.

It's nice to look at the interior when there is something unusual in it. Bog wood is the element that fully meets the needs of the designer, creating new and new things to improve human comfort.