Leaning towards rubberwood because i like the darker look and it seems harder than bamboo.
Rubberwood vs bamboo.
Rubberwood is commonly advertised as an environmentally friendly wood as it makes use of plantation trees that have already served a useful function.
Rubberwood is a low cost light tropical hardwood timber.
As i always say furniture is a very big word.
Here you ll find each wood species listed by hardness levels.
Which type of wood the user wants totally depends on the need of the users.
Bamboo vs rubberwood same price.
Bamboo a native plant to tropical regions with heavy rainfalls grows much faster than hardwood and has a different cellular structure.
If you plan using rubberwood or better say hevea in europe you wouldn t sell anything.
Bamboo is the choice of many environmentalists.
Also considering buying a top on etsy but seems like it will be too close in price to an uplift reclaimed to justify the hassle and wait.
Bamboo is not wood.
And it goes straight from small tables to cupboards to beds.
The rubber tree gets its name from the commercially harvested milky latex it exudes when cut.
Both the rubberwood as well as bamboo wood are the best types of wood in their own way.
A hard grass it is a sustainable renewable resource that needs no chemicals to thrive or be harvested.
Rubberwood is derived from the rubber tree.
This latex is used to make rubber.
Although it is commonly grouped with hardwood flooring bamboo is not actually a wood but rather a woody grass.
Rubberwood is a whitish lumber that gradually fades to a light brown.
Reclaimed is about twice as much is this worthwhile.
Before going to purchase any type of wood you need to go through the advantages and disadvantages of both types of wood.
Actually rubberwood is not considered good quality in the western markets ironically so because in fact it really is.
Each wood species is listed in alphabetical order with its corresponding number next to it.
Thoughts from those who have.
Hello and thanks for the a2a.
Rubberwood is a light colored medium density tropical hardwood obtained from the parĂ¡ rubber tree hevea brasiliensis usually from trees grown in rubber plantations.
In many aspects it is comparable to teak.