| The name comes from its inner  bark, or bast, used by Native Americans to make rope.
 Where it GrowsPrincipally the Northern and Lake states. Average tree height is 65 feet.
 
 Main UsesCarvings, turnings, furniture, pattern-making, mouldings, millwork and musical  instruments. An important specialized use is Venetian blinds and shutters.
 
 General DescriptionThe sapwood of basswood is usually quite large and creamy white in color,  merging into the heartwood which is pale to reddish brown, sometimes with  darker streaks. The wood has a fine uniform texture and indistinct grain that  is straight.
 
 Working PropertiesBasswood machines well and is easy to work with hand tools making it a premier  carving wood. It nails, screws, and glues fairly well and can be sanded and  stained to a good smooth finish. It dries fairly rapidly with little distortion  or degrade. It has fairly high shrinkage but good dimensional stability when  dry.
 
 Physical PropertiesThe wood is light and soft with generally low strength properties and a poor  steam-bending classification.
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