Wood, Understood — From Forest to Finish
At Wood Work Science, we turn complex wood behavior into clear, practical decisions. We test, measure, and explain—so your joinery fits, your finishes cure right, and your projects last. Have a tricky wood problem? Ask us anytime.

Make Smarter Choices With Evidence, Not Guesswork

Know Your Species: Strength, Hardness, Movement
Side-by-side species profiles with hardness, density, shrinkage ratios, and working notes. Real shop effects—tear‑out risk, burn tendency, screw-holding. Plus acclimation guidance matched to your climate.

Finishes and Glues, Decoded
Cure-time and bond-strength checks across temperature and humidity. Film build, adhesion, and compatibility—tested. From shellac to 2K poly, from PVA to epoxy: what to use, when, and why.

Moisture Mastery = Fewer Failures
EMC you can use. Meter comparisons, kiln notes, and acclimation checklists. Stop cupping, gapping, and glue-line failure before they start.
Explore Our Latest Guides and Lab Notes
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How Do You Repair Scratches on Different Wood Species and Finishes?
Repair scratches on wood species and finishes: identify wood, assess finish, pick filler or wax,…
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What Scientific Uses Do Wood Stove Ashes Have in Your Workshop?
Practical guide to using wood stove ashes in woodworking and workshop care: finishes, fillers, rust…
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Can You Stain Over Paint? A Wood Science Reality Check
Can you stain over paint on wood? Guide to chemical and mechanical compatibility, prep, adhesion…
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How Flammable Is Walnut Wood? A Woodworker’s Guide to Ignition Points and Shop Safety
Walnut wood flammability: combustion temperature, ignition point, and fire safety tips for woodworkers.
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Is Pressure-Treated Wood Safe for Your Raised Bed? A Wood Science Breakdown
Is pressure-treated wood safe for raised beds? Guide on chemicals, leaching, soil contamination, risks, and…
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Can You Treat Wood With Motor Oil? A Wood Scientist’s Practical Guide
Motor oil on wood: effects on durability, safety, odor, leaching, fire risks, disposal, and safer…
New to Wood Work Science? Start Here.
Whether you’re building your first bench or your fiftieth cabinet, you’re in the right place. Start with our fundamentals—wood movement, grain selection, finishing systems, adhesive basics—then dive into troubleshooting shaped by reader questions. We update methods, run fresh tests, and revise conclusions as new data appears. Can’t find what you need? Tell us what to test next at woodworkscience.com/contact-us.
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How Do You Finish Teak Wood for Outdoor Furniture Without Fighting Its Natural Oils?
Prep teak: clean, sand; prime; paint or stain; seal; weatherproof; maintain outdoor furniture.
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Mahogany vs. Rosewood vs. Cherry: Which Wood Performs Best?
Compare mahogany, rosewood and cherry on Janka hardness, density, and wood movement to pick durable…
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When Can You Stain Pressure-Treated Wood? A Wood Science Guide to Drying and Absorption
When to stain pressure-treated wood after install; prep, moisture checks, and techniques for proper stain…
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Is Murphy’s Oil Soap Safe for Wood? A Wood Science Investigation
Does Murphy’s Oil Soap clean wood without harming finish or fibers? Finish safety, fiber risk,…
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How Do You Dry Wood Correctly? The Science of Methods and DIY Kilns
Compare wood drying methods and a step-by-step kiln build guide for woodworkers and wood-science enthusiasts.
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What Makes a Wood Glue Bond Last a Lifetime?
How adhesive chemistry and wood substrate properties affect bond compatibility and longterm performance under moisture…

About Wood Work Science
We’re a small, obsessive team of wood technologists, furniture makers, and millworkers. Decades of combined shop time. Years of lab work. We’ve tuned kilns, logged moisture cycles, pushed joints to failure, and rebuilt them better. Our mission is simple: translate the science of wood into reliable, real‑world guidance you can trust—so your projects survive seasons, travel, and time.
How we earn your trust: we document methods, share numbers, and state limits. Products are selected for relevance—no pay‑for‑placement. When we use affiliate links, they never influence our results and they help fund more testing. Every article is peer‑reviewed by a second editor and checked for clarity and safety. We correct mistakes promptly and timestamp revisions. Questions, corrections, or collaboration ideas? Reach us at woodworkscience.com/contact-us.


