Sunday, August 05, 2007

Parota and Rosewood



Some of the woods used in Mexican furniture are not familar. Parota is similar to teak in appearance and is resistant to humidity and insects. It grows abundantly in jungles from Mexico to Brazil and is used for furniture, frames, windows and doors. The picture is a Mexican Colonial style round dining table that can be built in many different styles.

Rosa Morada is another wood often used in the manufacture of furniture and comes from India, Mexico, Honduras and the Asia. It is sometimes called Rosewood. There is a photo showing the grain pattern of the wood. The colours can be changed.

The magic of Mexican furniture is the wood. Real wood is used not "wood solids and veneers and plywood". This furniture is hand-crafted, the tecniques taught by father to son over the years. Modern furniture produced in Canada and the US is made by machines (very pretty) but not special in the same way that only skilled artisans can create. Each swirl and design is carefully planned out and executed on wonderful woods.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Wow this all looks wonderful. Congratulations.
-Karen

Anonymous said...

How much would a table like this cost? Also can it be made in any size?

Unknown said...

Thanks to provide such info...its really show marvelous review and basically about furniture.