Other book junkies like me may be interested in Dr Seri Robinson’s book on spalting. The variety of colors in spalting is incredible, as are the fungi that cause them. She shows how the color from spalted wood was used centuries ago to add color to furniture and such. She points out that the black zone lines are defense lines created by competing strains of fungi to protect their “territories” while eating there way through the wood..
The best spalting I’ve ever had I “created” by accident. I put a wet bowl blank in a plastic bag to keep it wet until I turned it. Forgot about it until a few years later! It had an incredible growth of fungus on the outside and inside was some wonderful color. All the wood from that bowl blank was solid with no sign of rot.
I have some more blocks of wood in bags now trying do duplicate that mistake!
This photo doesn’t do justice to the color, but you can see a hint of some of the red and the intense green. (I should take photos from other angles some day.
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I’ve also had some beautiful spalting form Hackberry, not much color but some incredible detailed black lines. I like to give such blanks to people who make lidded boxes and Christmas ornaments.
(I thought these were Elm but the other John Jordan, the famous one, told me the wood was Hackberry. Had a bunch of it at one time. I put oil on the smaller one.
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JKJ