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zaria wrote:Saw some by a friend in teak,custom made,$40,000 very nice.
But the builder can't start till Feb next year,and it will take abt 6-8 weeks to complete.
skylinechild wrote:teak is very expensive. iirc its $5 /sqft.
try using other types of wood to offset the cost a little. ex mahagony
pugboy wrote:does it make a difference if the internals are also made of the desired teak etc ?
many prefer the melamine inside as it is white and easier to clean and see stuff in the cupboard
pugboy wrote:does it make a difference if the internals are also made of the desired teak etc ?
many prefer the melamine inside as it is white and easier to clean and see stuff in the cupboard
supercharged turbo wrote:As we on the topic,on average how much does a teak plantation earn?Lets say you have a 5 acre parcel of land with only teak...approximately how much teak trees will it hold,how long will it take before it can be cut and how much so will it earn?
skylinechild wrote:teak is very expensive. iirc its $5 /sqft.
try using other types of wood to offset the cost a little. ex mahagony
around your kitchen sink area use purple heart instead of the mahagony.reason i'd is it's water resistant. to retain its natural color of purple after installing use a finish containing a UV inhibitor
keep in mind this is a very hard wood to work with and a good deal of "woodworkers" dont know how to properly work with this type of wood.
pugboy wrote:Other options are to use a plain wood like pine and apply a finish,
A professionally done finish can be very impressive compared to a
Natural wood finish.
pugboy wrote:termites will eat either pine, even cedar.
the completed doors should be treated before finishing.
speedmelter wrote:finally zaria makes a post about the kitchen
amarmoonasar21 wrote:Big man use teak rite thru it will cost ah Lil extra but in the long run is everlasting an 1 more thing make the builder use epoxy glue to join the wood my cousin does this type of work if ur interested message me for more information
pugboy wrote:I went that way earlier this year, it is much less headache.
The flood wood is good, it is some kind of plastic type material.
If you are paranoid about roaches, you should have a good fitting concrete base installed and do away with the hollow bases the units come with as roaches can and will find a way even if your place is clean.
after units installed use the spray expanding foam to fill any cracks, crevices, cut off dried excess with a knife and seal with silicone.
Our previous kitchen had a concrete base and in some units there was a 1/8" space between the floor of the units and the concrete, when we ripped them out we found some roaches living there,
hence the use for expanding foam.
pugboy wrote:Other options are to use a plain wood like pine and apply a finish,
A professionally done finish can be very impressive compared to a
Natural wood finish.
pugboy wrote:after units installed use the spray expanding foam to fill any cracks, crevices, cut off dried excess with a knife and seal with silicone.
Corn Bird wrote:pugboy wrote:termites will eat either pine, even cedar.
the completed doors should be treated before finishing.
you're being naive and assuming that the woodworker is giving you good quality pine to start with
how is a typical consumer going to treat completed doors which have already been varnished? put rentokil on it?
yupSR wrote:Mdc um has sone good options
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