Greek Revival moulding defined American architecture from roughly 1825 to 1860, drawing directly on the columns, pediments, and bold flat planes of ancient Greek temples. The look is heavy, symmetrical, and confident — wide flat fascias, deep crowns with strong dentil or ovolo accents, and door casings built to read as miniature temple fronts.
Mason’s Mill stocks 44 historically accurate Greek Revival profiles drawn from our 8,000-profile library, available in poplar, pine, oak, mahogany, and other hardwoods. These profiles are the right choice for antebellum farmhouses, Southern plantations, and any restoration project where the original trim ran in wide, flat, classical bands.
Thermally modified ash rough lumber offers the classic, timeless sophistication of real wood combined with the exceptional durability that results from the thermal modification process. When it comes to rot resistance and stability, this ash rough lumber will take on any other real wood product, including tropical woods and other modified hardwoods. Meticulous milling means clean lines, tight seams and easy installation.
The thermal wood process modifies each board completely, all the way through to the core, leading to unequalled durability and stability without sacrificing the natural qualities of real wood.
Ash is regularly used for furniture, flooring, doors, architectural millwork and moulding, kitchen cabinets, paneling, tool handles, baseball bats, hockey sticks, skis, oars and turnings. The sapwood is light-colored to nearly white and the heartwood varies from greyish or light brown, to pale yellow streaked with brown. The wood is generally straight-grained with a coarse uniform texture.
The degree and availability of light-colored sapwood, and other properties, will vary according to the growing regions.
• Extended Lifespan
• Rot Resistance
CLICK HERE TO ORDER A $10.00 SAMPLE in your choice of species that will be credited towards your full order.
Contact Mason’s Mill to start your custom Moulding or Profile order.