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January 15, 2012

P.O.C. Dining Table

Live edge dining table with stainless steel legs, satin varnish finish

this is a dining table i made for a client in southern california out of salvaged port orford cedar. i’m also making coffee tables with p.o.c. and claro walnut (juglans hindsii). inquiries welcome. west coast deliveries available.

Port Orford cedar (chamaecyparis lawsoniana), also called Lawson’s cypress and “hinoki” in Japan
is actually a cypress, rather than a true cedar. P.O.C. only grows in coastal southern Oregon and far northern California. It’s rare to have a slab of old growth P.O.C. this big. Years ago, the Japanese fell in love with it because its light color and straight grain reminded them of their sacred hinoki (chamaecyparis obtusa), which they used for their temples and traditional baths. A close relative to hinoki, P.O.C. has become valuable due to heavy buying, along with the small supply of quality logs.

Now you can only really get the old growth from salvaged dead logs. P.O.C. has high oil content, so the dead logs are preserved and the wood is usually in perfect condition. The wood is also highly regarded by boat builders because it’s so stable and highly resistant to rot*.

Cleaning up the live edge outside Les’s shop

This particular slab was salvaged from a log that came off the beach in Gold Beach, Oregon, that had floated down the Rogue River after a big storm. It was milled by guitarmaker Les Stansell of Pistol River, Oregon who uses P.O.C. to make incredibly beautiful flamenco guitars.

I used myrtlewood (umbellularia californica) for the brace. It has tiger-striping in it. That gives it the figure. Tiger-striping happens when water gets into the wood, maybe from a broken branch, and then stains it. You have to mill the wood and dry it before it rots. Myrtlewood isn’t rare, but tiger-striping is.

Bookmatch top with satin varnish finish

*I have a bit of personal history with P.O.C.. When I was about 3 years old, my parents, brother, sister and I lived in a Mercedes cargo van for a year. We moved out of a home my parents owned in Santa Barbara and into the van because my dad wanted to build a sailboat and live in it. We made road trips down to northern Baja, and up to British Colombia. On our way to Vancouver we stopped in the small town of Port Orford, Oregon—near to where I live now—and my dad had some P.O.C. milled for his sailboat. The boat was never made, but that’s another story.

January 12, 2012

Banyan Tree and Port Orford Cedar Table

Banyan Tree, Sri Lanka 30×40″ silver gelatin print, claro walnut frame.

Live edge Port Orford cedar table.

March 29, 2011

Tables

I’m now offering live edge match-book and solid slab tables.

The bookmatch top and legs on the coffee table pictured are Port Orford cedar (chamaecyparis lawsoniana, also known as Lawson’s cypress and Oregon cypress, or hinoki in Japan). The accents are claro walnut, (juglans nigra and juglans hindsii hybrid, also known as black, Oregon and western walnut). The wood is milled from salvaged logs by my friend Les Stansell, a guitar maker from Pistol River, Oregon.

Custom sizing available. Inquiries welcome: contact@joecurren.com

December 15, 2010

Note Card Gift Box

Still looking for Christmas presents? How about this “water” note card gift box?

These gift boxes are $30 each + $6 shipping for first item.

They will be sent via usps priority mail. Order by Monday at 12:00pm pst to receive it by the 24th.

• 16 – 4 x 6″ blank note cards in a wood gift box.

• 4 images repeating 4 times with kraft paper envelopes.

• Images: “Brown Pelican, Rincon”, “Skogafoss, Iceland, “Firewater, Baja” and “Surfer, Chile”.

• Box hand-made with Port Orford cedar frame shop off-cuts and plywood lid.

• Cards printed in the USA on recycled, heavy 14 pt. matte paper.

Price is $30 + $6 shipping.

You can find a link to purchase them along with posters, books, prints, etc. in my new web store:

http://joecurren.com/#/store/

September 8, 2009

Redwood Frame

This is a frame I made recently for one of my Rincon prints. It went to a friend in Santa Barbara. It’s made from reclaimed redwood and Port Orford cedar.