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Thread: Mulberry?

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Sep 2015
    Location
    Chicago or SW Wisconsin
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    104

    Mulberry?

    I have an opportunity to grab some Mulberry logs.

    Should I bother?

    Why is it I've not seen a beautiful Mulberry bowl? Or even an ugly one? Or, have I missed it?

    TA

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jan 2011
    Location
    Norristown, Pa
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    270
    I turned several Mulberry bowls. Wood is light brown(tan) and cures to dark brown. Don't have a picture.

  3. Comes in several varieties........I have turned some yellow Mulberry. One natural edge bowl and a couple of pens from the scraps. No pics......sorry!
    Remember, in a moments time, everything can change!

    Vision - not just seeing what is, but seeing what can be!




  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Location
    Atikokan, Rainy River district, Ontario
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    There are 2 common Mulberry trees in N.America, one is the native Red Mulberry and next the imported species that was used in the trial of producing silk in he US which didn’t work well, even though the White Mulberry does grow just nicely here.

    Mulberry is very closely related to Osage Orange, close enough that most can’t tell the difference without some trials, Osage will make a yellow dye when steeped in water.

    I’ve turned quite a bit of Mulberry, much less so the Osage Orange wood, so first a picture of a couple of bowls that show the changing of the colors of both Mulberry and Osage Orange, 2 of each here.

    Mulberry and Osage.jpg

    Fresh color is bright yellow heartwood and white sapwood, like here.

    Fresh cut color Mulberry.jpg

    A couple more, it is behaving like fruitwood, so dry it slowly, even then the sapwood likes to check and split.
    Mulberry crotch.jpg Mulberry bowl.jpg Mulberry bowls.jpg
    Have fun and take care

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Location
    Rochester, NY
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    365
    YES, you should bother! It's lovely to turn wet and then you can fume it with ammonia to a lovely dark brown. Fuming after it has dried doesn't seem to work quite as well.

    Cheers,
    David

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    lufkin tx
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    2,054
    Red mullberry and osage are both bright yellow fading to dark brown. Both are displaced tropicals with all the usual problems. Very hard when dry, split easily and fade colors quickly.

  7. #7
    Grab it. It is one of my favorites. I prefer the mulberry I grabbed over the Osage I have laying around. Most I gave as gifts, but this one had a crack so it's a utility bowl. Excuse the simplicity, but I am a novice. The blanks I made were from a very old tree, unusally large diameter that fell victim to ants.
    As it is a working bowl, hope the wife doesn't mind me dumping contents and putting back in. Smudges are from being used.
    MullBerry2.jpgMullberry.jpg

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Sep 2015
    Location
    Chicago or SW Wisconsin
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    Thanks guys. Looks good.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    Lancaster PA USA
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    254
    Grab it if you can of course , such a silly question from a turner. Watch for cracks and ring/wind shake. If the tree grew sprawled out all over the place expect to find changes in density in the wood. My family had a huge sprawling mulberry cut down when I first started turning. It was full stress cracks and ring shake but it turned well. It will dull turning tools, bandsaw blades and chainsaw blades fairly quickly, the wood dust felt sandy. Our tree was cut down during the summer and it was FULL of water, I got a shower with every piece. The green wood starts out heavy but gets considerably lighter in weight when it dries. Starts out a cool yellow but changes to a reddish brown. The time for the color change seemed to depend on how much light it was exposed to. Oiling the wood seems to deepen the reddish brown even further especially walnut oil, at least it did with the wood I had. The really dark bowls Leo showed are the color mine turned out to be. Does make a good solid utility bowl that should last a long time even under heavy use.
    I know the voices in my head aren't real but boy do they come up with some good ideas !
    People discuss my art and pretend to understand as if it were necessary to understand, when it's simply necessary to love. - Claude Monet

  10. #10
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    Dec 2010
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    Evanston, IL
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    I am surprised by the love for mulberry expressed above. Maybe the variety we have here around Chicago is different. I have found it to be stringy and coarse grained. While the bright yellow is interesting at first, the brown that it quickly turns into is not attractive, imho. Ours must be different from Leo's, as you would never mistake it for osage orange.

    Edit: Knowing Leo's expertise in wood identification, I decided to post a shot of my mulberry and osage orange turnings. Maybe he can tell if my mulberry is of a different variety.
    Attached Images Attached Images
    Last edited by Jon Nuckles; 03-11-2016 at 12:17 PM.

  11. #11
    The only downsides to mulberry I found were the dramatic color change from bright yellow to a dark honey color, still pleasant but not exciting, and trying to keep the bark on. The incredibly stringy and coarse cambium layer can be stabilized, but the texture is a distraction from the form.

  12. That pretty yellow color on Jon's bowl above is what I liked, and the grain on his bowl is pretty much like what I turned as well......the bowl did turn darker, but the two pens stayed yellow, I guess because of the numerous extra layers of finish.
    Remember, in a moments time, everything can change!

    Vision - not just seeing what is, but seeing what can be!




  13. #13
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    Atikokan, Rainy River district, Ontario
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jon Nuckles View Post
    I am surprised by the love for mulberry expressed above. Maybe the variety we have here around Chicago is different. I have found it to be stringy and coarse grained. While the bright yellow is interesting at first, the brown that it quickly turns into is not attractive, imho. Ours must be different from Leo's, as you would never mistake it for osage orange.

    Edit: Knowing Leo's expertise in wood identification, I decided to post a shot of my mulberry and osage orange turnings. Maybe he can tell if my mulberry is of a different variety.
    Funny, as I looked at your pictures Jon, before reading your post, I said to myself that surely looks like Osage, then saw the name on the bottom of the second picture, of course the two pictures are not taken at the same angles to show the grain in more identical manner, as a matter of fact I cant tell what the grain looks like on that picture, just the yellow color, and those have always changed, some taking longer than others, mostly depending their exposure and or finish used.

    The color of both these woods are so alike and are changing very much to the amount of UV they are subjected to, my bowls are all finished the same so that does not differentiate the coloration.

    So if people can tell me with certainty which wood these bowls are made of, I’d say “ you are good” I know it isn’t easy.

    Also liking or not liking a color goes right up there withj what my Grandfather said, “If everyone liked the same thing, they all would have wanted to marry your grandmother”

    bowls.jpg 1 bowl.jpg Bowl.jpg bowl 2.jpg

    I know that both Red and White Mulberry can grow in the Chicago area, though the Red has always been a lesser grown wild tree, while the White has been planted as a park and garden species, hybrids like the fruitless and other varieties and they will grow very fast with the right conditions, and these will give the wood a coarse appearance, yet all turned well in my experience, here’s 2 that had grown fast, yet given time they all will change color.

    Anyway I would hive it better than a 50% change that you did turn White Mulberry, though I could never tell them apart by color or looking just at the wood

    fast grown.jpg handled MB .jpg
    Last edited by Leo Van Der Loo; 03-11-2016 at 10:31 PM. Reason: fat fingers
    Have fun and take care

  14. #14
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    Dec 2010
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    Evanston, IL
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    You know, Leo, the main difference between the mulberry and Osage I showed may well be the speed of growth. The Osage had close growth rings and was quite hard. It took a polish almost like an oily tropical. The mulberry had much wider rings and was softer and seemed coarse to the touch. My experience with mulberry around here, and it is one of the most frequently chopped down trees that I see, is that quick growth is very common. I get Osage much less often, so I don't know if what I got that time is typical. It is also true that the mulberry I showed had not completed its color change before I took the picture. I gave that one away while it was still yellow, but with a warning to the recipient not to fall in love with the color as it would not last. I also have a bit of a bias against mulberry because I once made a bench from it (kiln dried wood from a local urban wood supplier) and it was not as strong as I would have liked. I had to remake a couple of pieces that broke. I had made an earlier version from red oak and it was rock solid. Again, the mulberry had grown quickly and may have been weaker as a result. Finally, when I lived in the city and parked on the street, I used to curse the birds that ate the mulberries and left the evidence on my car.

  15. #15
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    Feb 2008
    Location
    lufkin tx
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    Both species are tropicals that were able to thrive in temperate zones as well. Growth ring width is a function of sunlight exposure (like all trees) while growing and can change drastically in the same log. Both are very hard and a bit brittle but very strong. Like most tropicals the color tends to fade with UV exposure and can turn to black with ageing.

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