Strouse Woodworking, Steve Strouse, Shaker Boxes, Band Boxes About the trees I get to work with - ImageEvent
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About the trees I get to work with
Photos and history on some of the trees that I am using in my work.

ELM from University Park Campus
WHITE WILLOW from Talleyrand Park
MAPLES from the Centre County Courthouse
1 - 3 of 3 Total. Shared
American Elm from University Park
1. American Elm from University Park 
I have been using the Elm for smaller boxes, letter openers, and the pencil boxes.  The logs were salvaged from the Penn State University Park campus during the '95 and '96 winter storms.  Many trees were removed after being severely damaged by the heavy snow.

 Elm is one of the rare woods in which the pores are arranged in wavy bands, and often give the wood a feather-like appearance.  Its color is usually a light brown to gray, but depending on the tree can have some dark brown areas and even a creamy brown color in the sap wood.
236 Visits
3 Images
Shared Album
The Majestic Courthouse Maples
2. The Majestic Courthouse Maples 
From the Centre County courthouse in Bellefonte.

  I have been making the smaller boxes, stamp boxes and letter openers from the Courthouse trees.
  I was shocked to open up the morning paper and find the trees on the courthouse lawn had been removed to make way for renovations.  Later that morning I stopped in at the county commissioners office to get information on what was to happen with the wood.  Much of it was cut into small pieces and scheduled to be hauled to a landfill.  After several phone calls, I had convinced the contractor to dump the wood at a friends farm, where I could work on salvaging pieces for lumber.  Another local woodworker, Robert Martin, was also interested in obtaining some of the wood, so we agreed to share the trees in hopes of preserving a small piece of Centre County history.
   The Sugar Maple was the last remaining tree from the original planting of the courthouse lawn in the mid 1800’s.  In nearly every photo or post card I was able to find, this tree shows up almost as a part of the courthouse.
  I have always enjoyed looking at the history of the trees I get to work with.  But can you imagine, 143 years in such a focal point of  Centre County, the people who may have stopped in the shadow of this majestic tree on a hot summer day?
450 Visits
8 Images
Shared Album
White Willow's from Talleyrand Park
3. White Willow's from Talleyrand Park 
201 Visits
2 Images
Shared Album

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