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Bolivian Rosewood Guide: Uses, Colour, Grain, Janka Hardness, Finishing & Project Ideas

Wood Species Guide > Bolivian Rosewood

Bolivian Rosewood Guide: Uses, Colour, Grain, Janka Hardness, Finishing & Project Ideas

Bolivian Rosewood, also known as Morado, Santos Rosewood, or Pau Ferro, is a dense exotic hardwood known for its reddish-brown, violet-brown, chocolate-brown, and dark streaked grain. It is popular for cutting board accents, charcuterie boards, serving boards, drawer fronts, cribbage boards, boxes, inlays, epoxy projects, and decorative woodworking where rich colour and strong natural contrast are the goal.

This guide explains what Bolivian Rosewood is, how it compares to true rosewood, how hard it is, how it works, how to finish it, what projects it is best for, and how to choose the right Bolivian Rosewood boards for your next build.

Shop Bolivian Rosewood at Jeff Mack Supply

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Add a high-quality Bolivian Rosewood image here. Ideal image: close-up of Bolivian Rosewood grain, water-popped Bolivian Rosewood, finished Morado board, or Bolivian Rosewood boards from Jeff Mack Supply.

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What Is Bolivian Rosewood?

Bolivian Rosewood is a common trade name for Pau Ferro or Morado, a tropical South American hardwood commonly associated with Machaerium species, especially Machaerium scleroxylon. It is also sold under names like Santos Rosewood and Caviuna.

Despite the rosewood name, Bolivian Rosewood is not usually a true Dalbergia rosewood. It is commonly used as a rosewood-like alternative because it has rich colour, dark streaking, high density, good hardness, and a polished appearance when finished well.

Quick Take: Choose Bolivian Rosewood when you want a dense, dark, rosewood-like hardwood for cutting board accents, charcuterie boards, drawer fronts, cribbage boards, boxes, inlays, epoxy projects, and premium decorative details.

Bolivian Rosewood Quick Specs

Property Bolivian Rosewood Details
Common Names Bolivian Rosewood, Morado, Santos Rosewood, Pau Ferro, Caviuna
Scientific Name Machaerium spp., primarily Machaerium scleroxylon
Wood Type Exotic tropical hardwood
Typical Colour Reddish orange, reddish brown, violet brown, chocolate brown, and darker brown to black streaks
Grain Usually straight, sometimes irregular or interlocked
Texture Fine to medium texture with good natural luster when surfaced and finished well
Janka Hardness Approximately 1,960 lbf
Average Dried Weight Approximately 54 lbs/ft³
Workability Fair overall; dense and hard, with possible tool dulling or tearout in irregular grain
Best Uses Cutting board accents, charcuterie boards, serving boards, drawer fronts, cribbage boards, boxes, inlays, epoxy projects, and decorative woodworking
Beginner Friendly? Best for careful beginners or intermediate woodworkers because it is dense and requires sharp tools
Outdoor Use? Most Jeff Mack Supply project uses are indoor boards, accents, furniture details, and decorative pieces
Best Finish Clear oil, hardwax oil, water-based finish, lacquer, shellac, or food-safe board oil depending on the project

Is Bolivian Rosewood a True Rosewood?

Bolivian Rosewood is commonly called rosewood because it can resemble darker rosewoods in colour, density, and finished appearance. However, the wood sold as Bolivian Rosewood, Morado, Santos Rosewood, or Pau Ferro is generally from the Machaerium genus, not the Dalbergia genus used for many traditional true rosewoods.

For most woodworking projects, the practical point is that Bolivian Rosewood gives you a rich, dark, rosewood-like appearance without needing to use traditional rosewood species. It is still a dense exotic hardwood and should be worked with care.

Important: Rosewood common names can be confusing. Buy based on the supplier description, the actual board appearance, species information when available, and the project you are building.

What Is Bolivian Rosewood Best Used For?

Bolivian Rosewood is best used where rich colour, dark streaks, and a premium small-project look matter. Because it is dense and attractive, many makers use it as an accent wood or feature wood rather than building very large projects entirely from it.

Project Type Is Bolivian Rosewood a Good Choice? Why It Works
Cutting Board Accents Excellent Bolivian Rosewood adds rich dark contrast beside maple, walnut, cherry, Purpleheart, Padauk, Wenge, and other hardwoods.
Charcuterie Boards Excellent The dark streaking and polished look make serving boards feel premium and unique.
Serving Boards Very Good The rich colour and dark grain make it useful for small presentation boards, gift boards, and decorative serving pieces.
Drawer Fronts Very Good The dark grain can create a high-end look for small drawer fronts and visible panels.
Cribbage Boards Excellent Bolivian Rosewood is a strong option for decorative drilled game boards when machined carefully.
Boxes and Small Projects Excellent Small projects show off the rosewood-like colour without needing large amounts of material.
Epoxy Projects Very Good Bolivian Rosewood pairs well with clear, black, white, bronze, gold, pearl, smoky grey, blue, and metallic resin colours.
Large Furniture Builds Possible, but not usually the most practical option The wood is dense, can be limited in availability, and may be better used for accents, panels, and feature parts.

Bolivian Rosewood Colour, Grain & Appearance

Bolivian Rosewood can range from reddish orange and reddish brown to dark violet brown, chocolate brown, or deep brown. Many boards show contrasting darker streaks that can look nearly black.

The grain is usually straight, but some boards can show irregular or interlocked grain. The texture is generally fine to medium, and the wood can develop a smooth, polished appearance when sanded and finished properly.

Bolivian Rosewood pairs well with maple, walnut, cherry, white oak, Wenge, Zebrawood, Tigerwood, Leopardwood, Purpleheart, Padauk, Black Limba, clear epoxy, black epoxy, gold pigments, bronze pigments, pearl pigments, and smoky grey resin.

Is Bolivian Rosewood a Hardwood?

Yes. Bolivian Rosewood is a hardwood, and it is harder than many common domestic woodworking species. With a Janka hardness of approximately 1,960 lbf, it is harder than walnut, cherry, white oak, hard maple, ash, Red Oak, Padauk, and Zebrawood.

That hardness makes Bolivian Rosewood durable, but it also means sharp tools and careful machining are important. It is a strong choice for cutting board accents, decorative strips, drawer fronts, small boards, boxes, inlays, and specialty projects.

Is Bolivian Rosewood Easy to Work With?

Bolivian Rosewood is workable, but it is not as easy as walnut, cherry, maple, or white oak. It is dense, can dull tools, and irregular grain may tear out during machining. Like many dense exotic hardwoods, it rewards sharp tools, light passes, careful sanding, and patient finishing.

Process Bolivian Rosewood Performance Shop Tip
Sawing Cuts well with sharp blades, but it is dense Use sharp carbide tooling and avoid forcing the cut.
Planing Can plane well, but irregular grain may tear out Take light passes and watch for changing grain direction.
Routing Routes well with sharp bits Use multiple shallow passes to reduce burning, tearout, and edge chipping.
Sanding Sands well and can develop a smooth polished look Do not skip grits. Remove scratches before applying oil or clear finish.
Drilling Drills well with sharp bits Clear chips often, use steady pressure, and avoid overheating the bit.
Gluing Can be more demanding than easier domestic hardwoods Use clean, freshly prepared surfaces and glue soon after machining.
Finishing Finishes beautifully Test your finish first because oils and clear finishes can deepen the reddish-brown and violet-brown tones.

Best Finish for Bolivian Rosewood

Bolivian Rosewood usually looks best with a clear or lightly warming finish that highlights the reddish-brown, violet-brown, and dark streaked grain. Heavy stain is usually unnecessary because the wood already has strong natural colour and contrast.

For cutting board accents, charcuterie boards, and serving boards, use a food-safe board oil or wax. For drawer fronts, boxes, panels, cribbage boards, and decorative projects, hardwax oil, clear oil, shellac, lacquer, water-based finish, or a durable clear topcoat can all work.

Project Recommended Finish Type Why
Cutting Board Accents Food-safe cutting board oil and wax Easy to maintain and refresh over time.
Charcuterie Boards and Serving Boards Food-safe board oil or wax Enhances the dark streaked grain while keeping the board suitable for serving use.
Drawer Fronts and Panels Hardwax oil, clear oil, lacquer, shellac, or durable clear finish Protects the surface while letting the rosewood-like colour stay visible.
Cribbage Boards Clear oil, hardwax oil, lacquer, shellac, or clear topcoat Protects the surface and helps the drilled board look polished and premium.
Boxes and Decorative Projects Clear finish, hardwax oil, shellac, lacquer, or water-based finish Small projects are a great way to show off the rich grain.
Epoxy Projects Hardwax oil, clear oil, or polished epoxy system The best choice depends on whether the surface is mostly wood, mostly epoxy, or both.

Recommended Bolivian Rosewood Finishing Supplies

Is Bolivian Rosewood Good for Cutting Boards?

Bolivian Rosewood can be excellent for cutting board accents and contrast strips. It is hard, dense, dark, and visually rich, making it a strong pairing with maple, walnut, cherry, Purpleheart, Padauk, Wenge, Tigerwood, and other hardwoods.

For cutting board use, choose properly dried, stable boards, avoid defects, sand thoroughly, and finish with a food-safe board oil or wax. Because Bolivian Rosewood is dense and premium-looking, many makers use it strategically as part of a layout rather than the entire cutting board.

Is Bolivian Rosewood Good for Charcuterie Boards?

Yes. Bolivian Rosewood is a strong choice for charcuterie boards, serving boards, and small presentation boards because it has a rich, polished appearance once sanded and finished.

The dark streaks and reddish-brown colour can make even a simple board look premium. A clear food-safe oil or wax finish will usually deepen the colour and make the grain more dramatic.

Is Bolivian Rosewood Good for Epoxy Projects?

Bolivian Rosewood is very good for epoxy projects when you want dark, rich, rosewood-like colour with natural streaking. It pairs well with clear, black, white, gold, bronze, pearl, smoky grey, blue, green, and metallic epoxy colours.

Bolivian Rosewood works well for epoxy serving boards, small river boards, decorative strips, signs, trays, wall art, and accent details. Before pouring epoxy, make sure the wood is dry, clean, sanded, and free of dust, loose fibres, and unstable material.

Helpful Epoxy Links

What Bolivian Rosewood Should I Buy?

The best Bolivian Rosewood product depends on your project. Use project-ready boards for cutting board accents, charcuterie boards, drawer fronts, DIY projects, cribbage boards, signs, boxes, inlays, and decorative woodworking.

Jeff Mack Supply’s current Bolivian Rosewood boards are listed as kiln dried, dressed on two sides, approximately 3/4" thick, 24" long, and 3" to 4" wide. Because this is a limited-time product, availability may change.

Project Goal Best Bolivian Rosewood Option Recommended Link
Cutting board accents, charcuterie boards, cribbage boards, boxes, and DIY projects Project-ready Bolivian Rosewood boards when available Shop Bolivian Rosewood
Drawer fronts, small panels, and decorative details Bolivian Rosewood boards selected for strong colour and visible dark streaking Shop Bolivian Rosewood Boards
Mixed-species cutting board layouts Bolivian Rosewood paired with maple, walnut, cherry, Padauk, Purpleheart, Wenge, or Tigerwood Shop Dimensional Lumber
Projects where you need easier machining Consider walnut, cherry, maple, or white oak instead View the Wood Species Guide
Unsure what size you need Start with board foot calculations and project layout Read the Board Foot Guide

Shop Bolivian Rosewood for Your Next Project

Jeff Mack Supply carries Bolivian Rosewood boards when available for cutting board accents, charcuterie boards, drawer fronts, cribbage boards, epoxy projects, signs, boxes, inlays, and decorative woodworking. Order online or visit us in-store in Mississauga.

Shop Bolivian Rosewood →

Bolivian Rosewood vs Other Woods

Bolivian Rosewood is often compared to Walnut, Wenge, Tigerwood, Leopardwood, Padauk, Purpleheart, and traditional rosewoods. It is usually chosen when you want a dense, dark, rosewood-like wood with rich streaking and premium small-project appeal.

Comparison Main Difference Best Choice If...
Bolivian Rosewood vs Walnut Bolivian Rosewood is harder, denser, and often more streaked. Walnut is darker brown, smoother-looking, and easier to work. Choose Bolivian Rosewood for premium small accents. Choose walnut for dark furniture and easier machining.
Bolivian Rosewood vs Wenge Bolivian Rosewood is reddish brown to violet brown with dark streaks. Wenge is darker, coarser, and often nearly black after finishing. Choose Bolivian Rosewood for a rosewood-like look. Choose Wenge for dark modern contrast.
Bolivian Rosewood vs Tigerwood Bolivian Rosewood usually has darker rosewood-like colour. Tigerwood has warmer reddish-brown colour with more tiger-like dark streaking. Choose Bolivian Rosewood for dark premium accents. Choose Tigerwood for warmer striped contrast.
Bolivian Rosewood vs Padauk Bolivian Rosewood is darker and more subdued. Padauk is brighter orange-red and more colour-forward. Choose Bolivian Rosewood for dark elegant projects. Choose Padauk for bold orange-red accents.
Bolivian Rosewood vs Purpleheart Bolivian Rosewood is reddish to violet brown with dark streaks. Purpleheart is naturally purple and more colourful. Choose Bolivian Rosewood for rosewood-like grain. Choose Purpleheart for bold purple accents.

Common Mistakes When Working With Bolivian Rosewood

Assuming It Is True Dalbergia Rosewood

Bolivian Rosewood is usually Pau Ferro or Morado, not a traditional true rosewood. It has a rosewood-like look, but the common name can be confusing.

Using Dull Tools

Bolivian Rosewood is dense and can dull cutters. Sharp blades, bits, and light passes give cleaner results.

Skipping a Glue-Up Test

Dense exotic hardwoods can be more demanding to glue. Use freshly prepared, clean surfaces and test your process on offcuts when possible.

Ignoring Dust Control

Use good dust collection and personal protection when sanding or machining dense exotic woods, especially if you are sensitive to wood dust.

Skipping a Finish Test

Clear finishes and oils can deepen the reddish-brown and violet-brown colour. Always test on an offcut first.

Expecting Every Board to Match

Bolivian Rosewood can vary in colour and streaking. Lay out your project before cutting so the grain looks intentional.

Bolivian Rosewood FAQs

Is Bolivian Rosewood real rosewood?

Bolivian Rosewood is usually Pau Ferro, Morado, or Santos Rosewood from the Machaerium genus. It is commonly called rosewood because of its appearance, but it is not usually a true Dalbergia rosewood.

What is another name for Bolivian Rosewood?

Bolivian Rosewood is also commonly called Morado, Santos Rosewood, Pau Ferro, or Caviuna.

What colour is Bolivian Rosewood?

Bolivian Rosewood can range from reddish orange and reddish brown to dark violet brown or chocolate brown, often with darker brown to black streaks.

Is Bolivian Rosewood hard?

Yes. Bolivian Rosewood is hard and dense, with a Janka hardness of approximately 1,960 lbf.

Is Bolivian Rosewood harder than maple?

Yes. Bolivian Rosewood is harder than hard maple. Bolivian Rosewood is approximately 1,960 lbf, while hard maple is approximately 1,450 lbf.

Is Bolivian Rosewood harder than walnut?

Yes. Bolivian Rosewood is harder than black walnut. Bolivian Rosewood is approximately 1,960 lbf, while black walnut is approximately 1,010 lbf.

Is Bolivian Rosewood good for cutting boards?

Yes. Bolivian Rosewood can be excellent for cutting board accents and contrast strips. It is hard, dense, dark, and premium-looking.

Is Bolivian Rosewood good for charcuterie boards?

Yes. Bolivian Rosewood can be excellent for charcuterie boards, serving boards, and decorative presentation boards when properly sanded and finished with a food-safe board oil or wax.

Is Bolivian Rosewood good for epoxy projects?

Yes. Bolivian Rosewood is very good for epoxy projects because its rich reddish-brown and dark streaked grain pairs well with clear, black, white, gold, bronze, pearl, smoky grey, blue, green, and metallic resin colours.

Where can I buy Bolivian Rosewood in Canada?

You can shop Bolivian Rosewood online at Jeff Mack Supply when available or visit our store in Mississauga. We carry project-ready hardwoods for cutting boards, charcuterie boards, drawer fronts, cribbage boards, epoxy projects, signs, boxes, and decorative woodworking.

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