Juglans regia of the family Juglandaceae. This is a European variety of walnut and has numerous names, many of which include country or area names such as British, Carpathian, Caucasian, Circassian, English, European, French, Italian, Persian, Russian, Spanish, Turkish, and probably more
It is ranges from being indistinguishable from American black walnut to being highly figured, more like claro walnut. When it is from the Circassia area of the Caucasus (part of Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Russia) it is called Circassian walnut and is often highly figured and expensive. Tecnically, Circassian walnut is ONLY the walnut that grows in the Caucasus but wood vendors are not known for their technical accuracy, so caveat emptor.
my samples: NOTE: these pics were all taken in very bright incandescent lighting ("soft white" at 2700K) colors will vary under other lighting conditions
both sides of a sample plank listed as English walnut / Juglans regia --- the upper area is weakly colored heartwood and the lower area is sapwood
end grain and end grain closeup of the piece directly above --- the heartwood is on the right and the sapwood is on the left and that is more clear in the end grain closeup below than it is in these face grain pics
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both sides of a sample plank of French walnut / Juglans regia --- HUGE enlargements are present. This sample was loaned to me by David Clark whom I thank for this and other contributions to the site. This piece appears to be basically sapwood.
end grain and end grain closeup of the piece directly above
both sides of a sample plank of sinker ("river recovered") European walnut / Juglans regia --- HUGE enlargements are present. This sample was loaned to me by Mark Peet whom I thank for this and other contributions to the site.
end grain and end grain closeup of the piece directly above
both sides of a sample plank of burl circassiian walnut / Juglans regia --- HUGE enlargements are present. This sample was loaned to me by David Clark whom I thank for this and other contributions to the site.
end grain and end grain closeup of the piece directly above
END GRAIN UPDATE from directly above. The white spots/streaks are sanding dust filling the pores in the swirly grain, not a characteristic of the wood
veneer sold to me as European walnut
sample veneer sheet of Caucasian walnut veneer / Juglans regia --- HUGE enlargements are present. This part of a collection which is discussed here: COLLECTION D. Note that the collection has two sheets of Juglans regia, this one labeled Caucasian walnut and the one below labeled French walnut. Both common names are valid.
/ Juglans regia --- HUGE enlargements are present. This part of a collection which is discussed here: COLLECTION D. The label has this as Juglans "rigra", which is incorrect. Note that the collection has two sheets of Juglans regia, this one labeled French walnut and the one above labeled Caucasian walnut. Both common names are valid.
quartersawn figured European veneer --- the curl is weak, but it is somewhat stronger than what shows up in these pics. There is too much red in these pics --- the color is shown more accurately in the web pic directly below.
the web pic posted by the vendor who sold me the lot that the samples above were taken from. Except for the excessive shininess (which is absolutely typical of her pics) this is a very accurate representation of the wood.
French walnut veneer from COLLECTION E --- HUGE enlargements are present.
web pics:
European (English) walnut log end
slabs listed as English walnut
plank listed as European walnut / Juglans regia
planks listed as European walnut
planks listed as Juglans regia
planks listed as English walnut
planks listed as French walnut
English walnut / Juglans regia from the BogusColorVendor which is why the color looks ridiculous
listed as English walnut / Juglans regia, waxed bowl blanks, all from the same vendor and all with both levels of enlargement present.
listed as marbled crotch English walnut and I'm doubtful about the color
three English walnut pics (crotch slab, bookmatched veneer, and a "marbled" slab) all submitted by Don Restall, whom I thank for this and other contributions to the site. The marbled slab appears to have been moistened for the pics and the others appear to be raw wood.
fiddleback European walnut planks
plank listed as figured European walnut
veneer listed as curly English walnut even though the curl is tight enough to where most vendors would have listed it as fiddleback
veneer listed as European walnut
flat cut veneer listed as French walnut
European walnut veneer all from the same vendor
European walnut veneer sheets with both levels of enlargement (the grain looks correct in the enlargements)
bookmatched veneer sheets listed as European walnut. These were not listed as figured although they obviously are, and the color is very unlikely
flat cut veneer listed as figured French walnut
NOTE: all of the veneer in this section is from the same vendor and it is listed variously as
French, European and Circassian. I would not be the least bit surprised if all these were
from the same country and just advertised as being from different areas.
Also, this particular vendor does some kind of photographic manipulation
to make the wood look more shiny than it really is.
figured European walnut veneer, flat cut on the left and quartersawn bookmatched on the right
veneer listed as curly European walnut, obviously flat cut
flat sawn fiddleback veneer listed as European walnut
quartersawn fiddleback veneer listed as European walnut
flat cut quilted European walnut veneer, bookmatched
curly French walnut veneer and a closeup of the last piece
fiddleback French walnut veneer --- see "curly" directly above --- another case where "fiddleback" and "curly" are used somewhat interchangeably.
figured Circassian walnut veneer.
figured Circassian walnut veneer and a closeup, then another piece and a closeup
END OF "FRENCH / EUROPEAN / CIRCASSIAN VENEER FROM A PARTICULAR VENDOR
Circassian walnut veneer --- three shots of the same piece
French walnut --- flat cut veneer, veneer with fiddleback figure, and then a veneer sheet closeup, then quartersawn figured veneer
crotch veneer listed as European walnut / Juglans regia
crotch veneer listed as European walnut / Juglans regia and all from the same vendor
European walnut burl veneer; some of the pieces are bookmatched
European walnut cluster burl veneer
butt veneer listed as European walnut
bookmatched Italian walnut burl veneer
Italian walnut burl veneer
guitar sets listed as European walnut then French walnut
Circassian walnut pics (both sides of a burl, a gun stock blank, and a gun stock) submitted by Don Restall, whom I thank for this and other contributions to the site. Clearly, these are all moistened/finished, not raw wood.
These two pics of large slabs of Circassian walnut were contributed to the site by exotic wood importer Patrick Dean whom I thank for this and other contributions to the site.
Turkish walnut gun-stock blanks --- mostly crotch areas
English walnut pistol grips
bowl listed as English walnut --- if I had seen this at a quick glance with no ID, I might have thought it was zircote
paperweight of English walnut. I bought this from master turner Tom Laser in 1983. Don't know what finish he used but it's hard and shiny. A chunk of wood this size would be quite light for a paperweight but Tom's technique was to drill out the center, fill it with lead, and cap it with a very nice, clean-looking, pewter bottom as shown in the 2nd pic. I have 3 very beautiful bowls of his on the bottom of the "walnut, claro" page.