Product Details
Furniture-grade Tasmanian softwood at workshop thickness. Celery Top Pine — Phyllocladus aspleniifolius — at 25mm, the section Tasmanian cabinetmakers reach for when drawer sides and internal carcassing call for a stable, fine-grained timber.
What it is. The same Tasmanian endemic conifer as our 12mm boards, milled thicker for furniture-grade joinery. Pale cream-to-tan heartwood, fine straight grain, and the dimensional stability that earned the species its place in marine and cabinet work for over a century. Light for its strength, calm under the plane, predictable in glue-ups.
What you’d make with it at 25×100×900mm.
- Drawer sides and bottoms for cabinet drawers
- Internal carcassing — runners, kickers, dust frames
- Small furniture parts — rails, stiles, light frame components
- Workshop jigs, story sticks, and pattern-making templates
Working notes
- Density: ~580 kg/m³ — light, comfortable to hand-work and easy to lift
- Hardness: ~4.0 kN Janka — firm enough for furniture-grade joinery, soft enough for fine hand-tool work
- Grain: Fine, straight, even — planes to a smooth surface without tearout
- Surface: Supplied rough-sawn — dress one face true; 25mm gives you headroom to plane down to a final spec if your design calls for thinner
- Working: Cuts and shapes cleanly, holds glue and screws well, takes paint or clear finish evenly
- Finishing: Oil, clear lacquer, or paint — Rustins Danish oil for a hand-rubbed result; clear lacquer over sealer for cabinet-grade interior work
The stack it came from. Tasmanian-only species, limited production, ships north in the quantities the mill can spare. We hold cabinetmaker-grade lengths as they come through. Once it goes, the listing closes.
References. Species reference: Phyllocladus aspleniifolius — Wikipedia. Browse more: our Celery Top Pine stock.








