Elegant, timeless, and rich in character, cherry wood is a classic favourite among woodworkers, furniture makers, and craftsmen. We offer premium cherry lumber and products ideal for cabinetry, fine furniture, millwork, and interior finishes that demand warmth and sophistication. Cherry is known for its smooth texture, fine straight grain, and warm reddish-brown tones that deepen beautifully with age and exposure to light. It machines exceptionally well, sands to a silky finish, and takes stain evenly—though many prefer to let its natural beauty shine through with a clear coat. As a proudly Canadian company, Windsor Plywood specializes in hard-to-find, high-quality wood species and expert, one-on-one service. Whether you're creating a timeless centrepiece or adding refined detail to your home, cherry wood brings lasting elegance and performance to every project.
Specialty lumber includes domestic hardwoods like maple, walnut, oak, cherry, ash, and alder used primarily for furniture, cabinetry, and fine woodworking rather than structural applications. Exotic species sourced internationally also fall in this category. These are premium materials sold by the board foot rather than by the linear foot.
A board foot is a volume measurement equal to a piece of wood 12 inches wide, 12 inches long, and 1 inch thick, or any equivalent volume. When you buy hardwood lumber by the board foot, the price accounts for the width and thickness of the actual board, not just its length. Wider and thicker boards cost more per linear foot.
Hard maple is the industry standard for painted or stained cabinet boxes and doors due to its hardness, fine consistent grain, and smooth machining characteristics. Cherry and walnut are popular for stained natural finishes where visual warmth is important. Oak is traditional and widely available; its open grain requires filling for the smoothest painted finish.
Yes. Windsor Plywood sells hardwood lumber by the piece and by the board foot, not only in full bundles. This makes it accessible for smaller woodworking projects, furniture repairs, and custom builds where only a few boards are needed. Staff can help select pieces for grain, figure, and defect-free requirements.
Quarter-sawn lumber is cut so the growth rings run roughly perpendicular to the board face, producing a tighter, straighter grain pattern with a distinctive ray fleck in some species like oak. It is more dimensionally stable and resists cupping. Flat-sawn produces wider boards with a cathedral grain pattern and is the more common and affordable cut.