Wood types

Teak- 

Our Teak Furniture is the Finest Quality Teak Furniture in New Zealand and throughout the world. Teak wood is the premier choice for indoor and outdoor furniture. Teak is a stable timber with inherent water and rot repellency, due to its high content of oil and rubber compounds within the wood. Teak is a highly valued wood because of the even grain and beautiful color. It has been the natural material of preference in the shipbuilding and furniture making industries. Teak is a durable, strong wood, which has high resistance to insects and is virtually immune to decay.

Mahogany- 

The attractive appearance of mahogany lends a classic touch to furniture and fittings. Mahogany is particularly resistant to rot, mold, and pother organisms of decay, both with respect to the atmosphere and with the soil. Mahogany has one of the most beautiful colors and straight grains of all time. Other woods have knots and defects, but mahogany is so perfect it's almost hard to believe that it naturally grows that way. The look of mahogany is both elegant and timeless, ushering warmth into any room lucky enough to be graced with its presence; this beauty and lack of imperfections make it the most envied and sought after wood for furniture enthusiasts. Wood this beautiful is already more than worth the money, though the long life of mahogany also helps instill confidence in the investment. 

Mindi-

Mindi wood, known scientifically as Melia azedarach, and more commonly as white cedar or Chinaberry, originated in Asia and India. Originally planted in North America as a shade tree, mindi is now harvested from farmed, locally grown trees and is mostly restricted to small-scale projects and hobbyist applications. Mindi is naturally resistant to decay and fungus as is cedar. Fresh-cut or mindi sap wood appears close to poplar, as it's yellowish with brown streaks. With exposure to light and closer to the heart wood, mindi grows darker in as in the colors found in teak or cherry. Its texture is coarse like oak, but it has tighter grain patterns than oak does.

Suar -

Suar Wood is also known as Samanea Saman. It was actually originated from South Mexico to Peru and Brazil, but it has been popular in South. Its cultivation has been practiced along the Southeast Asia and Hawaii. Suar Wood has been one of the most often wood used to build furnishings such as table, console table, stands, mirror frame, bench and chest.

Suar Wood has been used for decades by South East Asian countries such as Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia, etc. Suar Wood is wide-known as one of the most durable and affordable woods. That’s the reason why many manufacturers produce budget furnishings as well as high-end ones with this.

The Suar Wood is known from the big tree with massive symmetrical crown. Its height can reach up to 25 m and the diameter can be up to 40 cm. Its habitat is in field and forest. Some even grows along the highway. Since the cultivating of this wood is very easy and it can be found almost anywhere, suar wood furniture is strongly demanded both locally and internationally.