All About Poplar: What’s it good for??

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  • čas přidán 6. 11. 2022
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  • Jak na to + styl

Komentáře • 979

  • @johndodson8464
    @johndodson8464 Před rokem +5

    Beautiful.

  • @dozer1642
    @dozer1642 Před rokem +21

    This could be your most poplar episode. 🥸

  • @dunndee111
    @dunndee111 Před rokem +5

    Hello ladies

  • @timothybaker8234
    @timothybaker8234 Před rokem +7

    Believe it or not, Balsa is technically a hardwood.

  • @JosephMullin
    @JosephMullin Před rokem +5

    Thank you for the education

  • @trucknut01
    @trucknut01 Před rokem +4

    good job'

  • @anthonyricard7458
    @anthonyricard7458 Před rokem +5

    Great information Emerald and excellent camera work! Keep the great info coming we enjoy it! Have wonderful evening! TTFN

  • @johncrowley1203
    @johncrowley1203 Před rokem +3

    The definition of hardwoods and softwoods is not about the hardness or softness of their lumber: hardwoods come from deciduous trees, and softwoods come from coniferous trees. So, balsa wood is classified as a hardwood. But what then is a redwood tree? Redwoods (sequoias) are so old phylogenetically, that they predate the evolutionary differentiation between coniferous and deciduous! (They're usually referred to as softwoods when sold as lumber).

  • @tony-ps4qw
    @tony-ps4qw Před rokem +111

    Poplar is used quite a bit to make moldings like crown molding because it mills well and also has a good surface to paint with not a lot of knots, checks or voids. It is usually not a wood to stain due to the many color variations it has. It also sands easy and has a smooth surface

    • @ascienceguy-5109
      @ascienceguy-5109 Před rokem +7

      Ditto. As a woodworker I love poplar because it is easy to work and it is stable. Plus the price. Usually I use it for "paint grade" projects, but some boards are fine for clear-coated furniture

    • @sawmilldan
      @sawmilldan Před rokem +6

      It takes walnut stain well.

    • @johnsonpaul1914
      @johnsonpaul1914 Před rokem +7

      I disagree about the staining. As a stainer and painter in a 20 year period I probably did 50 homes with stained poplar. As long as the color is dark and the stain is a heavy bodied wiping stain such as Zar it stains quite well. I did about 600 homes over a 20 year career and most of those 600 was both supplying and finishing the millwork package. I did not install.

    • @marklambert4793
      @marklambert4793 Před rokem +5

      I used it to build an entire new fireplace mantle.
      Painted it afterwards, and you couldn’t tell it from solid oak.

    • @bobgardin2347
      @bobgardin2347 Před rokem +1

      We often used poplar in custom cabinet shops because it was light, strong, and fairly stable. It painted well, could be used for moldings, and for edging that would be laminated.

  • @tedduke1699
    @tedduke1699 Před rokem +42

    Emerald, the granary on my farm is sided with 175 to 150 yr old poplar siding. The barn is sided with 150 to 175 yr old poplar siding. Much of that has been replaced a couple of years ago. None of that was ever painted to our knowledge. Our house is sided with poplar siding and has held up reasonably well for over 30 years (it is stained). All of that poplar was cut here on the property. IF I WERE TO build a barn --- not happening-- I would use poplar.😀

    • @2010COpall
      @2010COpall Před rokem +1

      Let me start by admitting i know little to nothing about turning hardwood trees into lumber..... Would a poplar, or any other hardwood, that was harvested 150-200 years ago be of sterner stuff than trees harvested now? Trees back then grew undisturbed for decades/centuries while today's trees haven't been around that long given how much logging has been done in Pennsylvania. Does that make sense?

    • @lawnmowerman4040
      @lawnmowerman4040 Před rokem +2

      Same here I have a barn from 1894 made from oak, cypress and poplar I used some of it to build my cabin. Old poplar looks brown and is beautiful I have a couple videos if you look for them, I also used gum inside and out, along with sassafras. Old growth is different from what we see today way stronger

    • @ronin2963
      @ronin2963 Před rokem +1

      Would be nice to see some pictures of that

    • @lawnmowerman4040
      @lawnmowerman4040 Před rokem

      @@ronin2963 Here’s a short video my phone has a crappy camera czcams.com/video/O0oPBo9ADrs/video.html

    • @pulppeeler
      @pulppeeler Před rokem +2

      My garage was built from all aspen (poplar) from walls to homemade trusses to siding. Great wood but must be kept dry. Ppl said I couldn't use it, it wouldn't last. One of he main uses for it is PLYWOOD, so why not building lumber???

  • @sfh294
    @sfh294 Před 9 měsíci +2

    The world needs more women like you. 💪🤝

  • @johnwhitehead3685
    @johnwhitehead3685 Před rokem +80

    I'm a huge fan of poplar! It's also called "tulip wood" and is a member of the magnolia family. My local lumber mill turned me on to poplar about three years ago. I was making a dozen 24"x30" frame and panel doors for a project that was designed to be painted, rather than stain/varnish. I was going to use soft maple but when I got to the lumber yard and told the sawyer what I was doing, he suggested poplar. Besides being about 2/3 the price of the maple it is perfect paint grade lumber, not much more expensive than white pine. The grain is so straight and it machines beautifully. Very few knots as well. The doors and subsequent projects I've use it for turned out amazing. I imagine you could stain/varnish as well, but I haven't tried it. Usually I use cherry, walnut, maple, or oak for projects like that.

    • @chash7335
      @chash7335 Před rokem +3

      Tulip poplar is the local name for the tree. Whether or not it's a true "poplar" isn't relevant. Tulip poplar is common in the area Lumber Capitol logs, so that's likely what they are cutting in the video.

    • @David-fv7zg
      @David-fv7zg Před rokem +6

      @@chash7335 Not true. M9 M4 was correct, I am local to this mill so I know the local lingo. If it is a "poplar" or not is relevant in this case because she is actually discussing the specifics of it. The uses of true poplar and tulip poplar are generally the same, but if you want to correct someone, you should at least know your facts.

    • @chash7335
      @chash7335 Před rokem +2

      @@David-fv7zg Nope. true poplar doesn't grow in the area. I did research before I posted. Try taking your own advice.

    • @tspis
      @tspis Před rokem +5

      This is definitely tulip poplar, and not true poplar - you can tell by the bark. True poplar has pretty smooth bark, superficially similar to that of a birch.

    • @michaellovetere8033
      @michaellovetere8033 Před rokem +1

      yes i made a few doors with this wood...it takes paint very well

  • @MissouriOldTimer
    @MissouriOldTimer Před rokem +5

    4:40 lol. that somehow made it in life.. cool expression,,,lol they probably got it the old fashioned way,,,,, inherited it.. lol

  • @gregreeser8823
    @gregreeser8823 Před rokem +6

    So funny starting at 4:40

  • @carvingeden
    @carvingeden Před 5 měsíci +1

    Love seeing more women taking the front and center in this field. More of this!

  • @richardherring8220
    @richardherring8220 Před rokem +3

    Jade we herenin the Tarheel State sometimes refer to Popular as North Carolina Mahogany !!

  • @jacobwilliams5271
    @jacobwilliams5271 Před rokem +6

    I wish the deep south had a fall season. It's all heat and humidity, 2 weeks of the trees dying, then it is winter.

  • @robhertle4110
    @robhertle4110 Před rokem +9

    Congratulations Em on your channel becoming more poplar. Well someone had to start off with the poplar jokes. Anyway, thanks for the education.

    • @wayneweis653
      @wayneweis653 Před rokem

      Better keep your day job for a while. Thank you!

    • @flynnstone3580
      @flynnstone3580 Před rokem

      Great! Now we can have a Poplarity contest.

    • @flynnstone3580
      @flynnstone3580 Před rokem

      @@wayneweis653 she gave us some Poplar Mechanics of the wood

  • @johnhenderson299
    @johnhenderson299 Před rokem +2

    Great video Emerald

  • @richardjacques6370
    @richardjacques6370 Před rokem +2

    In Canada poplar is used for waferboard. Used in house construction and is less expensive then plywood

  • @dunndee111
    @dunndee111 Před rokem +6

    You have a great sense of humor.

  • @oldpossum57
    @oldpossum57 Před rokem +3

    Huh. I knew poplar could have a greenish cast. Didn’t know about the others. Traditional drawer slides, etc.

  • @dennisdevore1648
    @dennisdevore1648 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Emerald, you may not be "rich" in money, but you are certainly blessed with a wealth of knowledge, and other aspects that matter so much more. Money does not make you.

  • @mikel5253
    @mikel5253 Před rokem +1

    I worked in a mill for 37 years and we ran 100 of thousands lin.feet of popular into moldings, casing, baseboards,crown moldings , paneling, d4s etc.

  • @2010COpall
    @2010COpall Před rokem +8

    The subject of poplar aside, the editing, soundtrack, the b-roll, the drone footage used in the intro; the production values of Lumber Capital Log Yard videos just keep getting better.

  • @birdman3323
    @birdman3323 Před rokem +4

    It’s classed as a hardwood because it’s deciduous…

  • @robertgrey5993
    @robertgrey5993 Před rokem +2

    ‘Em how about talking a bit about the debarker, I mentioned I had a mill similar to yours without a debarker so they interest me.

  • @adrianalanbennett
    @adrianalanbennett Před rokem +8

    Poplar is one of the woods we used in our civil engineering mechanics of materials lab.

  • @mrwest5552
    @mrwest5552 Před rokem +3

    now you got me wondering how it would be for a simple table. Sweet Channel.

  • @rexwoodall2179
    @rexwoodall2179 Před rokem +25

    Emerald, an absolutely superb video! Great information and presence on your part. Your personality came racing through with your comment about “those who have made it.” Funny, informative, enjoyable and well prepared! You receive an A+!

    • @burlseeker4680
      @burlseeker4680 Před rokem +4

      That look on Emerald's face at 4:42 was absolute GOLD!!! LOL!!!!!!! 😂😂😃

  • @HuckThis1971
    @HuckThis1971 Před rokem +1

    Very popular in pulp and paper applications. It grows very fast.

  • @samhurley6611
    @samhurley6611 Před rokem +2

    Love sawing poplar. Makes great moulding, takes paint well.

  • @paulgatenby6354
    @paulgatenby6354 Před rokem +27

    At horticulture school we were taught that softwoods have cones and hardwoods have flowers, nothing to do with how hard the wood is. Love your channel.

    • @jeffloveless6536
      @jeffloveless6536 Před rokem +9

      I was always taught that hard would lost their leaves in the winter and soft woods didn't.

    • @diogenesegarden5152
      @diogenesegarden5152 Před rokem +4

      Yes soft woods are generally classed as conifers or cone baring and have needles rather than leaves, notable exceptions being larches and dawn redwood (Metasequoia glyptostraboides) which lose their needles in winter. Hardwoods are generally broadleaved trees and apart from alder don’t have cones. Many hardwood species can retain their leaves in the winter such as laurels and holly, holm oak and the tropical hardwoods. Balsa is a tropical hardwood but has one of the softest, lightweight woods. Yew is considered a sorfwood, although it is incredibly tough.
      I had some lovely colourful poplar from my local golf club and have milled it with a chainsaw mill. It is also light weight and easy to carve spoons etc. with a nice finish. Poplar is quite fast grown in comparison to most hardwoods and was grown in the UK for the match industry until everyone started using cheap plastic lighters or gave up smoking. It was grown at wide spacing, quite often in agroforestry or silvopastoral systems prior to canopy closure, with the branches trimmed up the trunk to yield a clean and straight main stem. The wider spacing yields a broader girth in a shorter time period. Lime (Tilia spp.) is very popular with the carving fraternity for its even grain and ease of carving. It is classed as a hardwood as it is broadleaved and loses its leaves in winter. It is often referred to as bass wood.

    • @billybragg6543
      @billybragg6543 Před rokem +1

      FFA taught me that in 1975

    • @Yettiattack
      @Yettiattack Před rokem +4

      Any leaf tree is a hardwood

    • @Johnrider1234
      @Johnrider1234 Před rokem +1

      Its a hardwood.

  • @jodyfannin5496
    @jodyfannin5496 Před rokem +2

    Thanks!

  • @davidmajersky1969
    @davidmajersky1969 Před rokem +1

    I love working with Poplar love the grain it has

  • @ccole9080
    @ccole9080 Před rokem +9

    my father in law and his son made some nice small tables out of poplar years ago . They worked at a high end comercial furniture plant and could buy surplus wood at a steep discount , They still use the tables, 40+ years and still on good shape . The poplar has been very durable .

  • @gil9417
    @gil9417 Před rokem +15

    It was great to hear the hydraulics at work moving the log around on the LT40. Maybe include some more sounds like the Grapple or the Splitter...loving the content!

    • @andrewdelaney2410
      @andrewdelaney2410 Před rokem +1

      Do you think you have a lot in common with Laura Farms? Caz gear is a great decision. You are doing great as is. Just a thought to reach out since your channels are similar. If not, disregard my comment as I am just trying to help.

  • @johnklein6040
    @johnklein6040 Před rokem +1

    Popular is considered a hardwood when used as trim but a softwood when used as firewood.

  • @butchhull2890
    @butchhull2890 Před rokem

    now there is a young lady that knows what she is talking about good job

  • @coldspring624
    @coldspring624 Před rokem +3

    Tulip Poplar is a great wood.

  • @WilliamFlint
    @WilliamFlint Před rokem +10

    The "rainbow" poplar that she was describing and hoping for in the video is actually the southern Tulip or yellow poplar which is actually in the magnolia family (genus Liriodendron) and just called "poplar" because it looks similar and also has light/soft wood like the true northern poplars like aspen, cottonwood, etc, in the genus Populus. The tree she cut in the video was a true/northern poplar. Tulip poplars have bark that forms deeper and more interconnected ridges, the wood is much whiter, and then of course has the characteristic purple and green hues that she was referring to. Growing up in VA, I've cut LOTS of tulip poplar.

    • @rosewoodsteel6656
      @rosewoodsteel6656 Před rokem +1

      Yep! I have a lot of it on my property. When the trees come down, I split it into "early and late" season firewood. It burns hot and relatively fast, so I use it in the warmer winter days.

  • @forkintherode8236
    @forkintherode8236 Před rokem +6

    I’ve always liked working with poplar. I would never thought of the picture frame application. Gotta love the responsible harvesting and replenishing of wood. A talented friend of mine was brought in as an expert witness in a lawsuit against a chair manufacturer claiming that the wood wasn’t harvested at it’s full strength.
    I never would have thought that.

  • @inkydoug
    @inkydoug Před rokem +5

    Ok! I have 3 huge poplars that blew down on my vacation property and have been thinking about chainsaw milling them. I just subscribed this morning and up pops this!

  • @IAM...1111...
    @IAM...1111... Před rokem +8

    Emerald I was thinking of retiring the employee of the week nomination cause I'm not sure if the winner's have been compensated, however you eye roll with the comment about those ridh people that somehow made it in life had me pn my panties. For this reason you're earned my nomination for Monday (as well as a very informative message). Thank You 💚

  • @JohnSmith-ki2eq
    @JohnSmith-ki2eq Před rokem +5

    It is indeed good for carving and one of my electric guitars has a poplar body, and it plays real nice.

  • @drac229
    @drac229 Před rokem +1

    We used to run oak most of the week. Hands would be stained by the red oak. Last couple of hours of the day on Friday the sawyer would run poplar. It would take the stain off.

  • @calvinsmart3471
    @calvinsmart3471 Před rokem +1

    Emerald,love the look and the phrase,made it in life, love it ....Cal in Calgary

  • @michaelcrawford3997
    @michaelcrawford3997 Před rokem +5

    We use it for making trusses, which makes it very useful, indeed. Also in framing structures anywhere above the ground where it will stay dry.

  • @ianwalker4803
    @ianwalker4803 Před rokem +4

    yea interesting

  • @ronaldzeoli7528
    @ronaldzeoli7528 Před rokem +1

    Poplar wood is used a lot in inexpensive drum sets
    And other Beginner musical instruments. it's good wood and it keeps the cost down. Your a smart lady.

  • @johndeggendorf7826
    @johndeggendorf7826 Před rokem +1

    Great video. 🙏 Lots of comments that imply some of us just aren’t very smart. How’s this…Deciduous = “Hardwood”. Coniferous = “Softwood”…Deciduous trees are the ones with “leaves”, Conifers have cones & usually needles. As to “hardness”, conifers are USUALLY softer, which is why we like them for pounding nails. (But that’s not a rule. Balsa is deciduous, for example, while southern yellow pine is a conifer.) It’s pretty simple. ✌️🍷🎩🎩🎩

  • @gaiustacitus4242
    @gaiustacitus4242 Před rokem +39

    Emerald, you have a solid career ahead in social media promoting products and services beyond the family business. You've really grown over the past year as a presenter and the video editing is professional quality. Best wishes to you, Jade, and all of your family.

  • @NorthernMichiganSaweyer
    @NorthernMichiganSaweyer Před rokem +2

    It used to be a big one for the auto industry back in the day. Onaway Michigan is known for making steering wheels for cars in its early years one company used it for dash components. There was a buyer in Canada that paid good price for veneer.

    • @jimmusson
      @jimmusson Před rokem

      As a child I vacationed at black lake. This was in the 60s.

    • @NorthernMichiganSaweyer
      @NorthernMichiganSaweyer Před rokem

      @Wylie Wildt I grew up the road from the power plant in tower until 83 then moved to Cadillac area. I ended up moving onto the family farm by Cheboygan I get over there from time to time

  • @johncostello3162
    @johncostello3162 Před rokem +1

    Poplar is a hardwood tree that produces a soft wood
    We use it a lot in California for molding, door jambs etc
    Like you videos

  • @jjmcrosbie
    @jjmcrosbie Před rokem

    I live in France. There's a lot of Poplar (Peuplier) grown here. One large volume use of it, green, is for 3×3cm roof-tile battens. It's delivered tightly lashed in bundles of 25. Roofers only open the bundles as they're ready to use them as they can twist off in a big way in an hour or two. Overnight, forget it! Another use, seasoned, is in those parts of furniture which aren't seen, such as drawer liners and bottoms in preference to plywood. I have seen it in churches, too. Some people will say it's resistant to wood borers. It certainly isn't. There's an old English saying about the longevity of Poplar "Though heart of Oak be ere so stout, keep me dry and I'll see him out!". While we're talking about soft hardwoods (without messing about with Balsa or Bass), there are also Lime, Horse Chestnut and in USA especially, how about Catalpa? These are all nice, pleasant woods.

  • @hamrite
    @hamrite Před rokem +3

    Little safety issue comment. If you get close to heavy machinery .... tie your hair properly so it never gets caught in a mechanical device. My knowledge of some horrible stories make me just a little worried about anybody getting hurt. Very interesting work on wood and its ways to being used. Keep the good work going !!!!

    • @joecliffordson
      @joecliffordson Před rokem

      Hate to say your right and see less of that beautiful hair… but your right.

  • @rickchambers2132
    @rickchambers2132 Před rokem +11

    You may want to explain what determines what makes a tree hardwood or softwood.
    A wood will be classified as a hardwood if the seeds that the tree produces have a coating. These coatings can either take the shape of a fruit or a shell. A wood will be classified as a softwood if the seeds don't have any type of coating and are instead dropped to the ground and left to the elements.

    • @dozer1642
      @dozer1642 Před rokem +7

      Rick, I believe the actual difference between the two is in the cellular makeup of the wood. Generally speaking a Hardwood is an angiosperm, or a flowering plant that loses its leaves and softwood is a gymnosperm that usually retain their needles. I think the seeds are a part of the differences, but not the defining factor.

    • @guermeisterdoodlebug7980
      @guermeisterdoodlebug7980 Před rokem +3

      You are each partially correct and partially wrong. However, I think the bigger point is that Emerald should refrain from using what she knows from working on a log yard or doing a little quickie Internet research and teaching technical aspects of trees and wood technology. I greatly admire Em and her efforts in these videos, but to use a popular term of the day she is spreading “disinformation” in a few instances.

    • @chrisgullett4332
      @chrisgullett4332 Před rokem +1

      The terms hardwood and softwood has zero to do with how hard or soft the wood is. It actually refers to how they reproduce.

    • @i1bike
      @i1bike Před rokem +1

      Hardwood - sober, softwood - drunk

    • @hyzercreek
      @hyzercreek Před rokem

      Hardwoods are generally much harder than softwoods. You will never find a softwood as hard as oak or maple, and never find a hardwood as soft as white pine, but they overlap, willow is softer than hemlock, which can be very hard. It's just a general term. Hardwoods make sap, softwoods make tar, or they are dry, but they NEVER make sap. Hardwoods have leaves, softwoods have needles. Huge difference.

  • @sunline24
    @sunline24 Před rokem +1

    Great job Em.

  • @Icecoldgaming-vlogs
    @Icecoldgaming-vlogs Před rokem

    You’re looking very beautiful and very much happier

  • @paulrambone6705
    @paulrambone6705 Před rokem +45

    Poplar makes good molding wood.

    • @jeffkokosinski1784
      @jeffkokosinski1784 Před rokem +1

      Great molding my friend

    • @thomasschafer7268
      @thomasschafer7268 Před rokem +2

      Good for nothing. Only for matches.

    • @daddylee4216
      @daddylee4216 Před rokem +4

      IDK if it's a hard wood or not but it's pretty poplar

    • @stevedufresne772
      @stevedufresne772 Před rokem +1

      So true.
      1×3×16 is straight and clean.
      Easy to work with a router, holds stain well and never warps.

    • @orl477
      @orl477 Před rokem

      Yes sir primed and painted

  • @oleberg4196
    @oleberg4196 Před rokem +6

    Congrats on breaking 80,000 subs!!! I think I started watching your channel at about 1500 or so. You have grown your channel faster than any other channel I can think of. Keep up the good work. I learn so much from you and your family.

  • @keithburch5506
    @keithburch5506 Před rokem

    Hi, Keith in Hickory NC. I've been a subscriber for several months now, usually watch you on my TV so I can't comment there. It's midnight now, getting ready for bed and this video popped up, so thought I'd say hi. I am 67, retired w bad health so I watch a lot of tv...not commercial crap TV but CZcams maybe a movie on Hulu or Netflix but absolutely no crap. Real life. I want real life. Good content, clean, wholesome, family oriented, I am a huge fan of kids. Your family operation is very nice, interesting, informative, clean and best of all, real. I may not comment every video but I won't miss any! Thanks for sharing!👍👌❤🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @jimparker7778
    @jimparker7778 Před rokem +1

    It is a soft straight grained wood that can be used almost interchangeably with pine. I like it because it's very forgiving.

  • @jamesoncross7494
    @jamesoncross7494 Před rokem +5

    Great video. We used to use it for trim inside the houses we built. It was a littler harder to work with, but was more durable than pine for sure. We made built-ins with it as well.

  • @GregFurtman
    @GregFurtman Před rokem +6

    I'm a woodworker and poplar is a very lightweight and dimensionally stable wood. It is great for making rails & stiles for large doors that are going to have an outer veneer. Great stuff.

  • @jamesdiehl8690
    @jamesdiehl8690 Před rokem +2

    It's used for electric guitars, mounding and furniture.

  • @jim9337
    @jim9337 Před rokem

    Thank you Emerald, as usual, I know more for having stopped in.

  • @jameswildes4080
    @jameswildes4080 Před rokem +3

    Popular is good for carving. Try cutting some willow.

  • @FlipandTheBlueMule
    @FlipandTheBlueMule Před rokem +3

    They use Poplar to cleanse contaminanta from the soil as well.
    It draws a LOT of toxins out of the soil. That is why it is not a good wood to burn... as burning it would put the toxins back out into the atmosphere. I like poplar as flooring in my old farm house... looks great , a little softer, and quieter. Great channel Emerald

  • @stevewhite8161
    @stevewhite8161 Před rokem +3

    Oh mercy, I love your facial expressions when explaining popular and building furniture. Love your video's and you ladies seem to be authentic.

  • @erikpeterson25
    @erikpeterson25 Před rokem

    You folks ROCK ! thx for this 👍

  • @manleyhall5368
    @manleyhall5368 Před rokem

    The things you said were very interesting about poplar. I have discovered that it works well for making wall hung key chain holders. I made one for my surgeon which had a base of poplar, a sail boat of mahogany , two hearts of redwood had her name on one and her husband's on the other. The sail was also poplar because it was so light in color that it appeared as white. Poplar is easy to saw, easy to sand. And holds together well as it did when I cut the small pieces on the key chain holder for my urologist. The base is poplar, the baseball is also from poplar, however, the miniature baseball bat is oak. The borders of the plaques have routed edges because poplar cuts so smoothly and resists splintering when cut y a router. My doctors really like their key chain holder plaques. This is probably more info than you would ever want. I immensely appreciate your videos. You have an interesting and entertaining family. Thank you for allowing us to peer into your lives.

  • @daveclemmer4536
    @daveclemmer4536 Před rokem +8

    Love your videos! I like poplar a lot as a hand tool woodworker for its general utility and ease of working with. I use it often for furniture internals such as sides and backs of drawers, internal framing and shelving. It's my go to wood for utility odds and ends such as storage boxes, bench hooks, and other paint grade projects.

  • @oldnstillworkin5709
    @oldnstillworkin5709 Před rokem +3

    As I understood it poplar is very stable. It doesn’t expand and contract with moisture as much as pine

    • @patrickgrippo
      @patrickgrippo Před 13 dny

      Poplar,especially tulip poplar is used for supplemental roof supports in coal minesnit is much lighter to carry 800 ft.,throw it under a moving conveyor belt.compafed to red oak.Also the bottoms of zId posts tlerage moisture better.

  • @ThePoplarReport
    @ThePoplarReport Před rokem

    I feel like you’re talking about me.😂. Love your channel!👍

  • @johnmcdonald323
    @johnmcdonald323 Před rokem +4

    Poplar is a great wood and you can use it for a lot of things. I use it for custom door jambs, door stop, and crown mold. But it can also be used to make cabinet doors and drawer fronts, and also face frame for cabinets. Most of the time this Poplar gets painted, but it can actually be stained as well.

  • @stevec.1319
    @stevec.1319 Před rokem

    Gotta say, you are a masterpiece of art in red.

  • @jeffsiegwart
    @jeffsiegwart Před rokem

    Very instructional. Thank you.

  • @jacquesmertens3369
    @jacquesmertens3369 Před rokem +3

    Nearly 100K subscribers. This channel is becoming very poplar.
    Keep up the good work!

    • @tuberzish
      @tuberzish Před rokem +1

      Yeah, I see what you did there ... ha ha!😀

    • @POPNDOUGH
      @POPNDOUGH Před rokem

      That's a good pun. How hard wood it be to come up with another?

  • @Xander-dx6mw
    @Xander-dx6mw Před rokem +15

    Southern Yellow Pine is a softwood because of it's growth rate (a wide growth ring) and loose woodgrain fiber, yet it has a Janka rating of 860. Hardness (Janka rating) and the growth rate neither independently define a hardwood or a softwood. The Red maple grows at 2' per year (fast), yet has a tight woodgrain, heavy wood fiber, and subsequently has a hardness of 920-950, and it is the woodgrain/fiber that defines it as a hardwood. Douglas fir is a medium growth tree (1.5' per year), has a loose woodgrain fiber, and has a Janka hardness of 650, but is still a softwood. The thickness of the grain, and the durability of the grain fiber between the growth rings determine whether it is a hardwood or a softwood. Softwood typically is less used for furniture because of the tearout of the wood fiber.

    • @Thundermuffin93
      @Thundermuffin93 Před rokem +11

      These are some great facts and figures, but hardwood vs softwood is based on whether its deciduous or coniferous.

    • @tchevrier
      @tchevrier Před rokem +1

      trees are classified as hardwood or softwood based on the type of seeds they produce.

    • @EuroYardService
      @EuroYardService Před rokem +1

      @@Thundermuffin93 👍

    • @spekenbonen72
      @spekenbonen72 Před rokem

      @@Thundermuffin93 ...and nothing else. It's biological and not a grade...

    • @jrb_sland5066
      @jrb_sland5066 Před rokem

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Douglas_fir Wood from this species is preferred for its structural strength as lumber, preferred for constructing wooden-framed buildings. My 1944-vintage small house in the B.C. portion of the Okanagan Valley has milled [planed] 2"x10" floor joists cross-braced on 16" centres that simply don't bounce, supported on rough-sawn 6"x6" beams & posts of the same wood. Great timber !
      The British Navy used entire Douglas fir trees as replacement masts for warships when refitting at their naval base Esquimalt {southern tip of Vancouver Island, in British Columbia, Canada} even before Canada became a nation.

  • @bman3483
    @bman3483 Před rokem

    Thank you young lady. Keep up the good work.

  • @karlhermansen6037
    @karlhermansen6037 Před 4 měsíci

    I worked with a cabinet maker a few years back who built his painted cabinets almost entirely out of poplar because we could sand it to a glass finish and it took paint beautifully. It's strong and holds its shape.

  • @johnvallandigham5467
    @johnvallandigham5467 Před rokem +37

    I'm pretty sure any tree that loses its leaves during the winter is a hard wood tree, typically known as deciduous trees. Soft wood trees keep their needles or leaves throughout the winter. Douglas fir is a softwood but is one of the stronger woods and is often used for construction purposes especially carrier beams and load bearing columns. Deciduous is the key word here.

    • @mgbill793
      @mgbill793 Před rokem +4

      John Vallandigham you are correct

    • @cdouglas1942
      @cdouglas1942 Před rokem +6

      thats my understanding too

    • @jimmylowrey908
      @jimmylowrey908 Před rokem +8

      Not really. Pine is a conifer and keeps its needles our bald cypress is a conifer and loses its needles. Both are soft wood. Our live oak tree is a very hard wood and does not lose its leaves. Here in Ms. poplar is very useful in moldings and siding. It's fast growing and more expensive than pine.

    • @kensebring3683
      @kensebring3683 Před rokem +4

      On hardwoods losing their leaves basswood is very soft and loses its leaves.

    • @mgbill793
      @mgbill793 Před rokem +5

      @@kensebring3683 basswood is a hardwood

  • @VTSteve
    @VTSteve Před rokem +3

    May I suggest putting a sub head under Caz Gear telling what they do?

    • @kevind1555
      @kevind1555 Před rokem +1

      They make the Custom Merchandise (Merch) that channels like Lumber Capital Log Yard sell with their logos on it... It's really pretty high quality stuff actually...
      But somehow I think you already know that... and just suggesting a subheader for those that don't... Just Say'n in case you didn't.

    • @VTSteve
      @VTSteve Před rokem +2

      @@kevind1555 Exactly, it goes by pretty fast and I suspect it gets missed by a lot of folks, it wasn't until I saw it as a sponsor on another channel that I then looked it up...also I didn't see it listed under "Show More" which would help it get more hits.

  • @cecilarnold6843
    @cecilarnold6843 Před rokem +1

    I built my timber frame front porch out of 8”x8” poplar beams It’s still looking great

  • @bartmacaluso
    @bartmacaluso Před rokem

    Awesome, thank you hun

  • @TrapDoorWoodworks
    @TrapDoorWoodworks Před rokem +9

    It's considered a hardwood because it come from a deciduous tree. A lot of older furniture was made from veneered poplar. All of those colors disappear pretty quickly to a dull, but it can look pretty amazing when first exposed! I used it a lot for painted cabinetry in my furniture company, and would mix and match it with soft maple.

    • @jimbarron8688
      @jimbarron8688 Před rokem +3

      That's the criteria.

    • @billybobwombat2231
      @billybobwombat2231 Před rokem

      Hardwood classification is broad leaf, not deciduous, all those that aren't conifers

    • @TrapDoorWoodworks
      @TrapDoorWoodworks Před rokem +3

      @@billybobwombat2231 That's incorrect. The classification is deciduous, of which most are broad leaved.

    • @billybobwombat2231
      @billybobwombat2231 Před rokem

      @@TrapDoorWoodworks well none of our 660 species of eucalypts are deciduous and they're all hardwood, two possibly three of of 1000s of other non eucalypts species that are hardwood are deciduous, your definition is wrong, you may need to get a passport and broaden your dendology a bit. Hardwood is any tree isn't a conifer, those that aren't cone bearing.

    • @TrapDoorWoodworks
      @TrapDoorWoodworks Před rokem +3

      @@billybobwombat2231 Hardwood and softwood designations came about in America to describe deciduous and coniferous trees. Although most people think of it as evergreen or non evergreen, it is actually based on cones or seeds. If it has cones it is coniferous, and if it has seeds it is deciduous. Eucalypts have seeds so that would make them deciduous. They would fall into the "deciduous evergreen" category.

  • @tennesseetexan1957
    @tennesseetexan1957 Před rokem +6

    Emerald, you forgot to mention the wonderful by product of poplar, the bark. During certain times of the year when a green poplar tree is felled, the thick bark will easily peel off in one big piece. This bark is used to make bark siding and is extremely beautiful and durable. Also, many settlers like to use poplar trees for building cabins because they grow so big & straight and the wood is easy to work. While you mentioned that the poplar tree grows slower than pine, that may be true, but it actually grows pretty darn fast compared to other hardwoods like oak, maple, and walnut. I’ve seen a poplar grow 5-10 ft a year. Walnut, maple & oak, while they can grow very fast too, they tend to branch out more and not as straight.

    • @ACF6180T
      @ACF6180T Před rokem

      You are quite right ! They grow like weeds where I live northern VA. I can't stand them ! But I do like the flowers on them , & so do the bees it makes for great honey , & the deer love them to ! & the seeds they drop during late fall are quite annoying , & stick to the souls of your shoes ! But when you cut the wood they do have some nice colors, & they make for some nice kindling.

  • @gerrypowell2748
    @gerrypowell2748 Před rokem

    Never thought at my age and worked as a joiner/carpenter would appreciate being educated by a beautiful intelligent young lady👌👌👌

  • @harldave9850
    @harldave9850 Před rokem

    The video and all the comments below are very informative!! Great channel ladies! I've been subscribed for a few months now and I look forward to all of your videos. Thank you for entertaining and information!

  • @oldpossum57
    @oldpossum57 Před rokem +3

    customer: Do you have a copy of Poplar Science magazine.
    Newsstand: That ain’t Poplar Science. It’s ‘Popular’!
    Customer: Then you ought to have a copy.

  • @chokkan7
    @chokkan7 Před rokem +4

    Poplar actually grows rapidly for a 'hardwood', achieves a very large size if allowed to mature; the lumber, as noted is smooth surfaced, takes stain and paint well, is fairly stable dimensionally, and holds screws very well. When I still built cabinets, I used poplar for the carcass interior, including the drawer rails, and it worked like a charm.

    • @2ndborn186
      @2ndborn186 Před rokem +2

      It is classified as a hardwood because it is deciduous. It looses its leaves in the fall. Has nothing to do with density or grain. She is wrong.

    • @tylersmith9868
      @tylersmith9868 Před rokem

      @@2ndborn186 yessir

  • @lukeyd13
    @lukeyd13 Před rokem

    Thanks for sharing your knowledge

  • @BillC253
    @BillC253 Před rokem

    Great information.

  • @brianhewit2110
    @brianhewit2110 Před rokem +3

    One reason that so many people use this wood for projects, that you forgot to mention, is because it is just very poplar! 😂

    • @wayneweis653
      @wayneweis653 Před rokem +1

      Keep your delay job. Thank you!

    • @brianhewit2110
      @brianhewit2110 Před rokem +1

      @@wayneweis653 I posted that comment in the evening here in Ohio, so I have my day job AND my evening humor!

  • @davidmorris3138
    @davidmorris3138 Před rokem +3

    Thank you for educating me on softwood that are actually hardwoods I've always heard that the knots are tighter in poplar what's your opinion thank you for making day better

  • @btrent9244
    @btrent9244 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for explaining the scale for determining where the wood falls in terms of hardness. Educational 👍.

  • @collinsganson5115
    @collinsganson5115 Před rokem

    Love your sense of humor! Good, informative, video. Thanks.

  • @viper-oy8dl
    @viper-oy8dl Před rokem +13

    Wow, very informative. I thought Poplar was considered a harder wood. Can't wait for a vid on the Janka scale. Another great vid Emerald and always good to see the other half of the dynamic duo, Jade.

    • @2ndborn186
      @2ndborn186 Před rokem

      It is classified as a hardwood because it is deciduous. It looses its leaves in the fall. Has nothing to do with density or grain. She is wrong.

    • @addrock7695
      @addrock7695 Před rokem

      It’s considered junk here in NZ.
      On par with willow..

    • @olddammike
      @olddammike Před rokem

      @@addrock7695 willow makes the best gunpowder....

  • @Wesmancan
    @Wesmancan Před rokem +4

    She is drop dead gorgeous isn’t she. Wow lady.