Solid wood doors refer to doors made from natural logs or engineered solid wood sourced from forests. They often use high-quality woods such as walnut, teak, red oak, ash, and sapele.
Finished solid wood doors are characterized by their resistance to warping, corrosion, and cracking, as well as their heat insulation properties. They are scientifically manufactured through processes including drying, cutting, planing, tenoning, drilling, high-speed milling, assembly, sanding, and painting.
Solid wood doors use logs as the core material, which are dried and then processed through cutting, polishing, tenoning, and drilling.
Decorative doors made of solid wood come in three styles: all-wood, half-glass, and all-glass. From a wood processing perspective, there are two types: finger-jointed wood and solid wood. Finger-jointed wood is wood that has been sawn and finger-jointed; its properties are much more stable than solid wood, effectively ensuring the door will not warp. Solid wood doors give a sense of stability and elegance.
