Finishing & Wood

A Field Guide to Common Furniture Hardwoods

Oak, maple, walnut, cherry, and more, compared. Learn how common hardwoods look, work, and finish so you can choose the right species per project.

Samples of different hardwood species
Photograph via Unsplash

Standing at the lumber rack is where a lot of projects quietly go wrong. You picked a beautiful piece of wood, but three weeks later it dented under a coffee mug, or refused to take stain evenly, or turned out to cost more than the person you were building it for. Choosing a species is less about finding the "best" wood and more about matching a board's temperament to your tools, your finish, and the life the piece will actually lead.

How to read a hardwood before you buy it#

Before we get to individual species, it helps to know what you are actually judging. I look at four things at the rack, in this order.

  • Hardness. Roughly, how well it resists dents. This matters enormously for tabletops and floors, barely at all for a bookshelf.
  • Grain and pore structure. Open-pored woods like oak show a coarse, visible texture. Closed-pored woods like maple feel and finish glassy. This decides how much pore filling and sanding you are in for.
  • Workability. How the wood behaves under a plane, chisel, and sandpaper, and whether it burns at the router or blows out at the saw.
  • How it finishes. Some woods drink stain evenly; others blotch, and some are so pretty you should not stain them at all.

Keep those four in mind and the differences between species stop feeling like trivia and start feeling like decisions.

Red oak: the forgiving starter hardwood#

If you have never built with a hardwood, red oak is where I usually point people. It is widely stocked, it is one of the more affordable domestic hardwoods, and it is genuinely pleasant to work.

Red oak is hard enough to shrug off daily use, but not so hard that it fights your tools or dulls edges quickly. Its grain is bold and open, which does two useful things for a beginner: it hides minor tool marks and glue-line imperfections, and it takes stain readily and evenly. That coarse texture is also its main limitation. The open pores mean a smooth, filled finish takes extra work, and the pronounced grain reads as busy or dated to some eyes.

  • Great for: first hardwood projects, shaker-style furniture, shop cabinets, anything that will get knocked around.
  • Watch out for: the open pores. If you want a mirror-flat film finish, plan on a grain filler or several extra coats.

White oak, its cousin, is denser, more water-resistant, and has a tighter, more refined figure, especially when quartersawn. It costs more and works a little harder, but for outdoor furniture or anything that meets moisture, it earns the upgrade.

Hard maple: pale, tough, and a little temperamental#

Hard maple (also sold as sugar or rock maple) is the workhorse behind butcher blocks, workbenches, and bowling alleys, and that tells you most of what you need to know. It is dense, tough, and dent-resistant, with a fine, closed grain that finishes beautifully smooth. The pale, almost creamy color is clean and modern, and it lets the occasional flash of figure, like birdseye or curl, really sing.

The trade-offs are real, though.

  1. It is hard on tools and hard on nerves. Dense maple burns easily at the router bit and table saw, especially on stopped cuts and end grain. Keep blades sharp and your feed rate steady.
  2. It blotches when stained. This is the big one. That tight grain absorbs pigment unevenly, and a dark stain on raw maple often looks muddy and mottled. If you must color it, use a washcoat or conditioner first, or reach for a dye and a light hand.

Honestly, my advice is to stop fighting it: maple looks its best under a clear finish, or left to warm up naturally under the amber tint of shellac or an oil-based topcoat. Soft maple, a separate group of species, is easier to work and cheaper, and it is a smart choice for painted pieces or secondary parts where you will not see it.

Walnut: the one you do not stain#

American black walnut is the wood people fall in love with, and for good reason. It arrives chocolate brown, sometimes with purple or gray undertones, and needs nothing more than a clear finish to look expensive. It is moderately hard, but it planes, carves, and sands like a dream, and it holds crisp detail, which makes it a joy for anyone doing joinery or shaped work.

A few things worth knowing:

  • The color shifts, but in reverse. Unlike most woods, walnut tends to lighten and mellow toward a warmer honey-brown over years of light exposure. A blinding-dark board will settle into something softer.
  • Sapwood is stark. The pale, near-white sapwood contrasts sharply with the dark heartwood. Some builders feature it; most cut around it or blend it with a touch of dye.
  • A clear finish wakes it up. Raw, sanded walnut can look flat and grayish. The first coat of oil or finish is the moment the depth and chatoyance appear.

Walnut costs more than oak or maple, so I treat it as a wood for pieces that deserve it, and I save the offcuts religiously.

Cherry: patient beauty that ages into itself#

Black cherry is the wood that rewards patience. Freshly milled it is a modest pinkish-tan, and beginners sometimes feel let down. Then it spends a few months in daylight and transforms into a rich, glowing reddish-brown. That aging is the whole point, and it is why staining cherry to "speed it up" is usually a mistake, cherry blotches at least as badly as maple, and a botched stain job robs it of the very quality you paid for.

Working with cherry#

Cherry is a pleasure under hand tools, fine-grained and smooth, with a satisfying way of taking a crisp edge. Two cautions from experience:

  • It burns readily, arguably worse than maple, so router and saw discipline matters.
  • Because it darkens over time, any area you shade from light will stay pale. If a board sits half under a cutting board or a runner for its first year, you can end up with a permanent tan line. Let a finished piece bask evenly for its first few weeks before you load it up.

For finish, keep it simple. A clear oil or wax, or a warm shellac, and then let time do the real work.

The others worth knowing#

A few more species you will meet at a good yard:

  • Ash. Looks a lot like white oak, pale and open-grained, but lighter in color and famously shock-resistant and springy, which is why it shows up in tool handles and bent work. It stains well and is a solid, slightly cheaper stand-in for oak.
  • Poplar. Technically a hardwood, though soft and light. The greenish-gray streaks are unattractive under clear finish, but it is inexpensive, stable, and easy to work, making it the go-to for painted furniture and hidden internal parts.
  • Hickory. Very hard, very tough, with dramatic light-to-dark color swings within a single board. Beautiful and rustic, but it dulls tools fast and can be a handful to machine cleanly.
  • Mahogany (genuine or sapele). Reddish, stable, straightforward to work, and traditional for fine furniture. Real mahogany is increasingly restricted and pricey; sapele is a widely available, handsomely striped substitute.

Matching wood to the project#

When I help someone choose, the conversation usually comes down to three questions.

  1. What abuse will it take? A dining table or a floor wants hardness, so maple, oak, hickory, or ash. A display cabinet can be almost anything.
  2. What tools do you have? Dense, burn-prone woods like maple and cherry are less forgiving with dull or underpowered tools. If your kit is modest, oak, walnut, and poplar are kinder.
  3. What look do you want, and are you willing to stain? If you love dark wood, buy walnut rather than staining maple to fake it. If you want a warm red glow, buy cherry and wait. If you are painting, buy poplar and spend nothing extra.

The uncomfortable truth is that most staining disasters are really species-selection mistakes made one step earlier. Choose a wood whose natural color is close to your goal, and finishing becomes protection rather than a rescue mission.

A simple starting kit#

If you want a shortlist to build a few projects around, this is what I would keep on hand: red oak for anything utilitarian and knock-about, walnut for the showpiece you will keep for decades, cherry for pieces you are happy to let age gracefully, and poplar for anything headed under paint. Learn how those four behave under your own tools and finishes, and you will have the instincts to judge any new species you meet, right there at the rack, before you ever spend a dollar.

Beatriz Lima
Written by
Beatriz Lima

Beatriz is a finishing specialist who believes a great finish is where good projects are won or lost. She demystifies stains, oils and topcoats with the patience of someone who has sanded back plenty of mistakes, and always tests on offcuts first.

More from Beatriz