choosing the right wood for Stretcher Bars

Discuss Picture Framing topics.

PLEASE USE THE HELP SECTION
WHEN SEEKING OR OFFERING HELP!
Post Reply
nickjensen
Posts: 11
Joined: Tue 16 Nov, 2010 4:17 pm
Location: london
Organisation: student
Interests: painting

choosing the right wood for Stretcher Bars

Post by nickjensen »

Hi, I have a question about stretcher bars. I make my own and i was previously using softwood pine. However i find that it can not always be square and can have a tendency to warp.

I found a timber merchant in Peckham called Witton Timber and i can choose from a variety of Hardwood. I bought some Tulip and it works really well. I was just wondering if anyone had advice on another style of hardwood that may be more appropriate?
The choices are:

Ash (English)

Beach

Obeche

Maple canadian hard

Ash American

and elm.

I just wondered what you guys would recommend and why?

Also it is worth bearing in mind that i like my stretchers to have a little weight to them.
Regards,

Nick
User avatar
prospero
Posts: 11496
Joined: Tue 05 Jun, 2007 4:16 pm
Location: Lincolnshire

Re: choosing the right wood for Stretcher Bars

Post by prospero »

I'd reccomend buying them ready cut from Lion. They are made with finger-jointed pine that is laminated lengthwise. They are beautiful. :D Got to work out cheaper than trying to source a stable wood and cutting them yourself. They do them in three profiles. The 'Gallery' ones are like girders.

The only problem is if you want odd sizes (which I often do).
Watch Out. There's A Humphrey About
Nigel Nobody

Re: choosing the right wood for Stretcher Bars

Post by Nigel Nobody »

nickjensen wrote:Also it is worth bearing in mind that i like my stretchers to have a little weight to them.
Why?

Well seasoned California Redwood is excellent, because of it's stability and it's lightness.
A lot of finger jointed pine is used down here. It's cheap, quite stable and quite light!
nickjensen
Posts: 11
Joined: Tue 16 Nov, 2010 4:17 pm
Location: london
Organisation: student
Interests: painting

Re: choosing the right wood for Stretcher Bars

Post by nickjensen »

Hi, well yeah i make really small paintings, so i dont like the size of the mouldings offered at lion, i also like a lip of 33 no wider to rest my canvas on so i make them myself. I like the slight weight because the pictures are so small i like them to feel a little bit more substantial. Too light and they feel to fragile.

So thanks guys.
User avatar
Bill Henry
Posts: 935
Joined: Wed 28 Mar, 2007 8:38 pm
Location: Litchfield, NH USA
Organisation: Not so much - it's kind of messy.
Interests: Dry mounting dog hair, counting age spots on old people, playing chess with wood elves, scheming to take over the world.
Location: Litchfield, NH USA
Contact:

Re: choosing the right wood for Stretcher Bars

Post by Bill Henry »

My concern with using hardwood for stretchers would be the difficulty in mounting the canvas.

If one uses a simple mechanical stapler, you might not be able to drive the staples deeply enough to make them flush; if you use an electric or pneumatic stapler, you may knock the corners out of square.

… unless you are using strainers rather than stretchers, then … well, never mind. :)
Don't take life so serious, son, it ain't nohow permanent! – Porky Pine
framemaker

Re: choosing the right wood for Stretcher Bars

Post by framemaker »

I think tulip (also known as poplar) is the most suitable timber for stretcher bars.
Nigel Nobody

Re: choosing the right wood for Stretcher Bars

Post by Nigel Nobody »

nickjensen wrote: i also like a lip of 33 no wider to rest my canvas on ...
The canvas should rest on no more than a few mm on the outside of the stretcher. If you mean the front of the canvas rests on 33mm of wood, that's way too wide and can result in a line appearing in the canvas in line with the inner edge.

If stretchers feel too light and insubstantial to you, it doesn't mean that everyone will have the same opinion. (A feather is very light, but that doesn't mean it's quality is poor.) Stability of the wood is the most important factor in stretchers.
User avatar
Gesso&Bole
Posts: 952
Joined: Wed 24 Mar, 2010 3:35 pm
Location: Nottingham
Organisation: Jeremy Anderson Picture Frame Maker
Interests: Framing pictures, testing out the latest gismos, and sharing picture framing knowledge
Contact:

Re: choosing the right wood for Stretcher Bars

Post by Gesso&Bole »

I'd say tulip.

These guys also use tulip

http://www.johnjones.co.uk/services/sur ... tretchers/

Worth a look, very slick website
Jeremy (Jim) Anderson
Picture Framer and Framing Industry Educator
https://www.jeremyanderson.co.uk/
https://www.instagram.com/ja_picture_framer/
nickjensen
Posts: 11
Joined: Tue 16 Nov, 2010 4:17 pm
Location: london
Organisation: student
Interests: painting

Re: choosing the right wood for Stretcher Bars (Kiln dried T

Post by nickjensen »

Woops i ment 3 mm sorry must have miss typed. (not 33)

Yeah John Jones in north london use Tulip which is a good reassurance that it is a good wood.
They use Kiln dried Tulip, anyone know where you can get that?

Thanks a lot,

Nick
User avatar
prospero
Posts: 11496
Joined: Tue 05 Jun, 2007 4:16 pm
Location: Lincolnshire

Re: choosing the right wood for Stretcher Bars

Post by prospero »

I think you'll find that the difference in weight between Tulip and Pine on a small-sized stretcher is hardly worth considering. Just because Pine is botanically speaking, 'Softwood', it doesn't mean it's any lighter than a hardwood. Balsa is a 'Hardwood'. :wink:
Watch Out. There's A Humphrey About
Post Reply