Boringgeoff":2smk3hf0 said:
Many of the American makers list Cocobolo as used in their brace head and handles. Stanley Cat#34 of 1927 has Cocobolo on their better quality braces and Hardwood on the less expensive models. Similarly another acquisition of Stanley USA, John Fray, in 1911 has Cocobolo, Ebonised Hard wood or Mahogany Stain finish.
Geoff.
That's interesting, even today you find the best Cocobolo in US timber yards, no surprise really as it's often Mexican grown so they get "first dibs". in Europe you occasionally get the odd few bits of Cocobolo, but it's not common and tends not to be the very best quality. I know a few UK furniture makers who are quite disparaging about Cocobolo, I suspect that's because they're comparing second rate Cocobolo with the very best Rio.
Rio however was pretty much fully hoovered up by Europeans when they had all the money and I've never seen much of the really good stuff in the US. Now that you can't ship Rio internationally because of CITES, the Rio that exists is likely to stay in Europe. I have heard of a few enterprising Brazilian foresters returning to the taller stumps of old, felled Rio Rosewood trees, digging them out of the ground, gaining CITES exemption and processing the timber for astronomical sums of money. In the UK we call the timber taken from down by the roots "butty wood", I've never seen Rio butty wood but I have seen plenty of Walnut butty, it's what you'll often get in the stock of the very finest shotguns and it's breathtaking. Individual blanks of Walnut butty can sell for over £2000, I guess Rio butty will be similarly priced.
CITES has resulted in an interesting shift in furniture fashion, at least here in the UK. If you're a top flight UK furniture maker you've always got one eye on a Guild Mark award, but the Guild Mark rules now expressly forbid CITES timbers. Before that rule change plenty of the premiere UK furniture was being made in timbers like Macassar Ebony or Rio Rosewood; today it's all Rippled Sycamore, Walnut, or some other politically correct timber. And as furniture makers operating at the next level down, like myself, take our cue from the big names we also start using those same timbers. Sheep like I know but there we are.
I've got many cubic feet of big, sublime Rosewood boards in my wood store, bought over many years from retiring antique restorers and diligent scouring of timber yards. I'm currently trying to find out if the UK leaving the European Union means these boards won't then be saleable to German luthiers (which is who I've had the biggest cash offers from in the past), if that's the case then it'll be decision time...do I take a very big cheque or turn those boards into some special furniture?