[googlede477edf6b45bd5e.html]
Pictures Of Q/C Tiger Oak Veneer Showing Various Flake Patterns
Tiger Oak Veneer, Quarter Sawn Oak Veneer, Quarter Cut Oak Veneer, Q/C Quartered Oak Veneer, are different names for the same veneer. Tiger Oak Veneer is produced when a log is sliced using the "quarter cut" method. Quarter cut slicing produces the flake and tiger stripe patterns by exposing and emphasizing the medullary rays of the log.
The flake patterns (tiger stripes) of tiger oak veneer range from little to no flake up to heavy tiger flake. If the log is sliced using the quarter cut method, the veneer is called Q/C or quarter cut oak veneer regardless of the presence or amount of flake.
Shown here is a good representation of the various tiger oak veneer patterns. Even so, it is impossible to show all of the variations of tiger oak veneer that mother nature produces from one log to the next.
Photos Of Q/C Tiger Oak Veneer Showing Tiger Flake, Large Flake
Tiger Oak Veneer, Tiger Flake, Large Flake
Tiger Oak Veneer, Tiger Flake, Large Flake
Tiger Oak Veneer, Tiger Flake
Large Flake
Images Of Tiger Oak Veneer, Heavy Flake, Not Necessarily Large Flake
Tiger Oak Veneer Heavy Flake, Tiger Oak Veneer, Heavy Flake, Tiger Oak Veneer, Heavy Flake,
Not Necessarily Large Flake Not Necessarily Large Flake Not Necessarily Large Flake
Tiger Oak Veneer Heavy Flake, Tiger Oak Veneer Heavy Flake, Tiger Oak Veneer Heavy Flake,
Not Necessarily Large Flake Not Necessarily Large Flake Not Necessarily Large Flake
Photographs Of Tiger Oak Veneer, Little To No Flake
Tiger Oak Veneer, Little To No Flake Tiger Oak Veneer, Little To No Flake
Tiger Oak Veneer, Little To No Flake Tiger Oak Veneer, Little To No Flake