Consumers Like Wood Products Made in America
U.S. Wood Industry Gets an Opportunity

Consumers Like Wood Products Made in America  Wood products that are Made in America are getting easier to find. While it’s true that as the economy recovers and factories hum, there are more products being made here. But there is another factor at work as well: more consumers are placing a value on buying products that are domestically produced.

Responding to this, wood products companies are emblazoning their goods, websites and e-stores with the reminder that this stuff comes from North America, generating jobs in the U.S. and for our trading neighbors north and south of the border.

At the High Point Market furniture market last month, exhibitors in the Made in America pavilion doubled in number, showing mass produced, mass customized as well as made-to-order furnishings.

Made in America gained popularity as mainstream media recognized the critical part played by U.S. manufacturers — custom woodworkers among them — in restoring the U.S. economy to financial health. “Made in America” can be as simple as working in North American sourced species like red oak, white oak, ash, cherry, poplar, maple, hickory, alder and walnut.

Rick Hill set out on a journey covering hundreds of miles seeking made in America wood products. And he found them to be very competitive with imported wood products.

Made in America is the more than 30,000 square feet of flooring for the famed Barnes Foundation art museum manufactured by Frank Miller Lumber in Union City, IN, which provided the FSC-certified quartersawn white oak milled into flooring by Muscanell Millworks, Cortez, CO, then installed by Pennsylvania Flooring.

In this case, the architects’ flooring requirements for stability and durability under years of public wear didn’t specify Made in America. But the quarter- and plainsawn hardwoods Frank Miller provides for makers of fine casework, millwork and flooring were exactly what was needed. And as Muscanell Millworks proudly notes, was grown and milled in America.

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