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  1. Home
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  5. Black Walnut

Juglans nigra

Black Walnut

American Black Walnut is the chocolate-brown hardwood that built mid-century furniture. Imported into European yards as kiln-dried slabs, it works cleanly and finishes to a deep, warm tone that ages well.

Premium import, sourced outside EuropeFamily: Juglandaceae
Black Walnut
Black Walnut tree

Tree

Native to the eastern United States, not Europe. KORENA sources kiln-dried slabs through established North American timber channels and lands them in EU yards already at furniture moisture content. Expect FAS or better grading on slab stock, with provenance tied to a specific US mill or broker.

Wood appearance

Heartwood ranges from chocolate brown to a purplish or greyish brown, often with darker streaks. Sapwood is pale cream — usually steamed at the mill to even out the contrast, but you'll still see some on wide slabs. Grain is generally straight, though figured boards (curl, crotch, burl) turn up regularly and command a premium. Medium, even texture takes detail well.

  • Chocolate to purplish-brown heartwood
  • Pale cream sapwood, often steamed for uniformity
  • Darker streaks and figure on wider boards
  • Lightens slightly under UV over the first year
  • Deepens and warms under oil finishes
  • Generally straight; can be irregular or wavy. Medium texture.
Black Walnut grain

Mechanical properties

Density (kg/m³)560–660 kg/m³
Janka hardness (N)4,100–4,900 N
MOR: modulus of rupture (MPa)100–110 MPa
MOE: modulus of elasticity (GPa)11.0–12.0 GPa
Radial shrinkage5.0–6.0 %
Tangential shrinkage7.5–8.5 %
Volumetric shrinkage11.0–12.5 %
Natural durability (EN 350)Class 2 — Durable

Working with it

1 = difficult · 5 = excellent

Easy across the board. Sawing, planing, sanding, turning and carving all rate 4 out of 5. Glues and screws without complaint. Steam bending is the one weak spot (3/5) — workable for gentle curves, not the species you'd choose for tight bentwood seating. Sharp tooling keeps the surface clean; dull blades will burnish rather than tear.

Sawing
Planing
Sanding
Turning

Drying

Slabs arrive kiln-dried to roughly 8–10% MC. Movement in service is moderate — radial 5.0–6.0%, tangential 7.5–8.5% — so wide tops still want a breathable build (breadboard ends, slot-screwed cleats, or fixed-and-floating fasteners). Acclimatise to your shop for two to three weeks before final flattening.

Finishing

Finishes beautifully with very little fuss. Hard wax oil and Danish oil deepen the brown without muddying the grain; a thin shellac seal coat helps if you're spraying lacquer over oily patches. Sanded to 180–220 it feels silky in the hand. Black walnut lightens slightly with UV exposure over the first year — the opposite of cherry — so a UV-inhibiting topcoat helps on pieces near windows.

Durability and safety

  • Class 2 — Durable
  • Food contact safe
  • Dust irritant: wear PPE

Walnut dust contains juglone and is a known respiratory and skin sensitiser. Run a dust extractor at the source and wear a P3/FFP3 mask when sanding. Juglone-laden offcuts and shavings are toxic to horses and to some plants (tomatoes, apples), so don't compost or use as bedding. Cured finished surfaces are food-contact safe.

Best uses

  • Live-edge dining and conference tables
  • Mid-century-style casework and credenzas
  • Dark-toned kitchen islands and breakfast bars
  • Desks and writing tables with figured tops
  • Gunstocks, knife scales and high-end tool handles
  • Turned bowls and hollow forms
  • Hand-carved sculpture and relief panels
  • Food-safe serving boards and charcuterie platters

Pairs and substitutes

Pairs well with

  • Hard Maple
  • Black Cherry
  • European Ash
  • White Oak

Often substituted for

  • European Walnut
  • Claro Walnut

Sourcing and sustainability

  • Premium import, sourced outside Europe
  • IUCN: LC — Least Concern

IUCN Least Concern, no CITES listing. Decay class 2 (durable) but this is an indoor wood — the value is in the colour and workability, not outdoor performance. As a North American import, the supplier chain-of-custody back to the mill travels with the slab. EUDR due diligence is in preparation and becomes mandatory for large operators from 30 December 2026, and KORENA is building each slab passport to carry the provenance evidence a buyer will need.

Buyer questions

Is Black Walnut a good choice for furniture?

Black Walnut is best matched to projects such as Live-edge dining and conference tables, Mid-century-style casework and credenzas, Dark-toned kitchen islands and breakfast bars, Desks and writing tables with figured tops, Gunstocks, knife scales and high-end tool handles, Turned bowls and hollow forms, Hand-carved sculpture and relief panels, Food-safe serving boards and charcuterie platters. The final choice should consider grain, finish, movement allowance, and the room where the piece will live.

How hard is Black Walnut?

The listed Janka value is 4,490 N and the density is 610 kg/m³. Use these as comparison signals, not as a guarantee of how a finished surface will wear.

What should I check before buying Black Walnut slabs online?

Check measured length, width stations, thickness, drying method, moisture notes, colour variation, defects, and origin. Compare the measured outline against the finished drawing before reserving the slab.

Current stock

Black Walnut pieces available now

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We email you when fresh Black Walnut slabs land at KORENA. Each piece is one of one, so early notice matters.

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Sources

  • The Wood Database(accessed 2026-05-09)
  • USDA FPL Wood Handbook FPL-GTR-190 (2010)(accessed 2026-05-09)
  • Meier, E. — WOOD! Identifying and Using Hundreds of Woods Worldwide (2015)(accessed 2026-05-09)
Carving
Gluing
Screw / nail hold
Steam bending
Hacksmith The Smith Blade Pro (21-in-1 Titanium Multi-Tool)

Hacksmith The Smith Blade Pro (21-in-1 Titanium Multi-Tool)

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€345.10

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Incl. 19% VAT