Hi
A successful do-it-yourself project starts with good wood. At first you may 
think there's a secret lumberyard code when you confront the many types and
dimensions of wood. But once you take time to learn how the industry assigns 
grades and determines sizes, it's easy to choose and order the lumber best
suited for your purpose--and maybe save money, too.

Instructions
* STEP 1: Using a plan or sketch of your project, take a cutting list of all 
the pieces you need in each length to a lumberyard. You'll find a broader 
selection,
better quality and more expertise there than at a home center.
* STEP 2: Choose softwood or hardwood. Most construction lumber is softwood and 
is milled from fast-growing evergreens--pine, fir, cedar, redwood--in 2-foot
increments from 6 to 20 feet in length. Hardwood comes from dense-grained 
deciduous trees such as maple, cherry and oak. Used for fine woodworking, it's
available in more thicknesses and in random widths and lengths.
* STEP 3: Match grade to purpose. To guarantee uniformity, lumber is graded by 
the quality of its surface. Terms differ for softwoods and hardwoods, but
all describe appearance rather than strength. Look for clear- or select-grade 
boards for visible projects like shelves or decks. Select grade has few 
knotholes
or discolorations. Common grade, which has more defects and is usually 
cheapest, is fine for items you plan to paint.
* STEP 4: Decipher lumber sizes. Sawmills cut wood into standard sizes, from 1 
to 8 or more inches thick and 4 to 12 or more inches wide. When this rough
lumber is planed, it loses 1/8 inch or more from each dimension, so a 2-by-4 is 
actually 1.5 by 3.5 inches.
* STEP 5: Buy precut wood for popular uses--stair treads, window trim, shelving 
and pieces such as spindles and furniture legs. These save time and take
the guesswork out of choosing species and grade, but cost more.
* STEP 6: Order lumber by the linear foot or the board foot. Use the former to 
order moldings, trim and same-dimension lumber (30 linear feet of 1-by-6
boards, for example). Use the latter to order random- width hardwood by volume 
for building furniture. As an example, 1 board foot equals 144 cubic inches.
* STEP 7: Select pine or fir for rough-cut projects and framing. Pick hardwood 
for fine furniture and projects that will get a clear finish. Pine cuts easily
and takes paint and varnish well. In hardwoods, ash and poplar are typically 
painted because they stain unevenly. Stain maple and oak to highlight their
grain. Walnut is strong and stains nicely; beech looks great varnished or 
stained but is hard on saws.
* STEP 8: Inspect for defects. Knots are a cosmetic flaw (unless they're large 
or about to pop out), but splits often get wider. To check for warping, lift
one end of a board and sight down its edge to see if it bends in either 
direction. To check for bowing or arching, lay the wood on a level surface. A 
seriously
bowed, cupped or crooked board is seldom workable, although minor bows will 
flatten out as you nail.
* STEP 9: Check moisture content, or seasoning. Lumber is kiln-dried (KD) or 
air-dried (AD). KD wood has about 8 percent moisture content; AD, 15 to 25
percent. For indoor furniture, KD lumber is preferable because the wood 
shouldn't dry out any further.
* STEP 10: Choose plywood for its strength and stability, the result of gluing 
several thin layers of wood together at right angles. Plywood used for 
sheathing,
subfloors and rough carpentry typically has a veneer of Douglas fir, graded on 
each side. If both sides will show in your finished project, buy A-A or
A-B grade. Plywood comes in 4-by-8-foot panels 1/4, 3/8, 1/2, 5/8 or 3/4 inch 
thick ($14 to $40 for Douglas fir, according to grade and thickness).
* STEP 11: Use hardwood-veneer plywood for furniture and cabinetry. It also 
comes in 4-by-8-foot sheets, but most dealers will sell a partial sheet. 
Thicknesses
range from 1/8 to 3/4 inch; the latter costs $65 to $105 per sheet. Be sure to 
ask for cabinet-grade plywood, which is typically 9-ply birch coming from
Denmark and other sources, and available through plywood distributors. Use 
finish-grade plywood for built-in projects, combined with more costly solid
woods for exposed areas. You can get plywood with a veneer of virtually any 
kind of wood in the world.
* STEP 12: Shop for alternatives to old-formula pressure-treated lumber (see 
Warning) for building decks, picnic tables and play structures. Heartwood grades
of redwood and cedar are naturally rot- and insect-resistant; prices vary 
widely by season and location. Consider composite (wood-plastic) lumber for 
durable,
splinter-free decking. Engineered lumber products come from small-diameter and 
fast growing plantation trees. They use wood fiber more efficiently than
conventional lumber, reducing pressure on old-growth forests and resulting in 
stronger structures. Choose exterior plywood--made with waterproof glue--for
other outdoor projects.

What To Look For
* Lumberyard versus home center
* Wood choice
* Suitable grade for purpose
* Precut wood
* No defects
* Moisture content

Overall Tips & Warnings
* The only way to ensure that you get high-quality wood is to pick out the 
boards yourself-- or at least approve their selection.
* Lumber describes milled wood more than 2 inches thick. Thinner wood is 
technically a board. Wood thicker than 5 by 5 inches is timber. Now you know.
* Lumber prices vary by season, region, availability and demand.
* Once you've calculated how much wood your project requires, get 10 percent 
extra to allow for mistakes and to match grain. Don't buy more than that. Wood
can warp if it's not stored in ideal conditions.
* Countries outside the United States have different systems for sizing lumber.

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