The wood of every Pacific Northwest shingle, every cedar shake roof, every traditional Finnish-style sauna, every cedar fence, every cedar-strip canoe. Western red cedar grows tall and straight along the wet coastal forests from Northern California to Southeast Alaska. The defining property is the heartwood's natural extractives (thujaplicins) which are toxic to fungi and many wood-destroying insects — cedar siding can sit unfinished outdoors for 50 years and not rot. Soft and lightweight (the lightest of the common American softwoods), with a distinct aromatic smell that comes from the same extractives. Reads as a working-wood for siding and outdoor structures, but premium clear-grade cedar is also a fine furniture wood (the chest 'cedar' that everyone has stored sweaters in is actually Eastern red cedar, Juniperus virginiana, a different species — Western red cedar is the architectural one). Buy from Rockler / Woodcraft / specialty cedar dealers; the supply is sustainable from FSC- and SFI-certified Pacific Northwest forests.
Thuja plicata, family Cupressaceae. Density 350–400 kg/m³ (12 percent MC — among the lightest commercial softwoods). Modulus of rupture 50–55 MPa. Modulus of elasticity 7.5–8.5 GPa. Compression parallel to grain 30–35 MPa. Shrinkage radial 2.4 percent / tangential 5.0 percent (low — the dimensional stability that makes cedar work well outdoors). Janka hardness ~1500 N (350 lbf — soft). Color: heartwood pinkish-red to reddish-brown freshly cut, weathering to silver-gray under UV exposure (the patina cycle, similar to teak); sapwood pale yellow-white, narrow. Grain straight, occasionally with knots in commercial-grade lumber (clear-grade is rare and commands a premium). Texture fine, even. The natural extractives (thujaplicins, thujones, plicatic acid) account for the rot resistance and the aromatic smell; they also account for some woodworkers' sensitivity reactions (the cedar-allergy is real for a small fraction of users). Works easily — hand-tools cleanly, machines without complaint, glues without surface preparation. Holds nails moderately (low Janka hardness limits hold strength); pre-drill near edges to prevent splitting. Pressure-treatment is unnecessary for above-ground exterior use — the natural rot resistance does the work.
Principled BSDF defaults derived from the sphere woodgrain finish. Reasonable seed for Blender, Substance, Keyshot, Rhino — tune per material. Or grab the whole library at once: ForMaterials library →
# finish: woodgrain albedo #a06848 metallic 0.00 roughness 0.60 ior 1.45 transmission 0.00 clearcoat 0.00 sheen 0.00 anisotropic 0.60
{
"albedo": "#a06848",
"metallic": 0.0,
"roughness": 0.6,
"ior": 1.45,
"transmission": 0.0,
"clearcoat": 0.0,
"sheen": 0.0,
"anisotropic": 0.6
}
# Blender 4.x — Principled BSDF
# Western Red Cedar (Thuja plicata) · finish: woodgrain
import bpy
mat = bpy.data.materials.new(name="mat_cedar_western_red")
mat.use_nodes = True
bsdf = mat.node_tree.nodes["Principled BSDF"]
bsdf.inputs["Base Color"].default_value = (0.3515, 0.1384, 0.0648, 1.0)
bsdf.inputs["Metallic"].default_value = 0.000
bsdf.inputs["Roughness"].default_value = 0.600
bsdf.inputs["IOR"].default_value = 1.450
bsdf.inputs["Transmission Weight"].default_value = 0.000
bsdf.inputs["Coat Weight"].default_value = 0.000
bsdf.inputs["Sheen Weight"].default_value = 0.000
bsdf.inputs["Anisotropic"].default_value = 0.600
# KeyShot 11+ — lux Python API, Generic material
# Western Red Cedar (Thuja plicata) · finish: woodgrain
# Run from Window → Scripting Console
import lux
mat = lux.createMaterial(name="mat_cedar_western_red", materialType="Generic")
mat.setProperty("diffuse", (160, 104, 72)) # 8-bit sRGB
mat.setProperty("metallic", 0.000)
mat.setProperty("roughness", 0.600)
mat.setProperty("indexOfRefraction", 1.450)
mat.setProperty("transparency", 0.000)
mat.setProperty("coatingWeight", 0.000)
{
"_format": "Substance Designer / Painter \u2014 pbrMetalRough constants",
"_about": "Western Red Cedar (Thuja plicata) \u00b7 finish: woodgrain",
"baseColor": {
"r": 0.3515,
"g": 0.1384,
"b": 0.0648
},
"metallic": 0.0,
"roughness": 0.6,
"ior": 1.45,
"opacity": 1.0,
"anisotropyLevel": 0.6,
"_notes": "Channels listed are the standard Substance pbrMetalRough output. Drop into a Uniform Color node per channel, or as the constant input on a layered stack."
}
{
"asset": {
"version": "2.0",
"generator": "ForMatter"
},
"materials": [
{
"name": "mat_cedar_western_red",
"pbrMetallicRoughness": {
"baseColorFactor": [
0.3515,
0.1384,
0.0648,
1.0
],
"metallicFactor": 0.0,
"roughnessFactor": 0.6
},
"extensions": {
"KHR_materials_ior": {
"ior": 1.45
}
}
}
]
}
# USD Preview Surface — UsdShade.MaterialLook prim attributes
# Western Red Cedar (Thuja plicata) · finish: woodgrain
def Material "mat_cedar_western_red" {
token outputs:surface.connect = </mat_cedar_western_red/PreviewSurface.outputs:surface>
def Shader "PreviewSurface" {
uniform token info:id = "UsdPreviewSurface"
color3f inputs:diffuseColor = (0.3515, 0.1384, 0.0648)
float inputs:metallic = 0.000
float inputs:roughness = 0.600
float inputs:ior = 1.450
float inputs:opacity = 1.000
float inputs:clearcoat = 0.000
token outputs:surface
}
}
USDA Forest Products Lab Western Red Cedar entry; Western Red Cedar Lumber Association literature.
House vocabulary — terms ForMatter uses with intent.
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Conway's Material World on raw materials, Lefteri's Making It on processes, Forty's Concrete and Culture, Sparke's Design in Context, Bürdek's Design: History, Theory and Practice of Product Design, Schröpfer's Material Design on materials in architecture, Winchester's The Perfectionists on tolerance, Minshall's Your Life Is Manufactured on the global supply chain, von Busch's Making Trouble on material activism, Were's How Materials Matter, Hegger / Drexler / Zeumer's Basics Materials, Untracht and McCreight on metalsmithing, USDA Forest Products Lab on woods, GIA on gemstones, Schott / CoorsTek / Toray / Owens Corning datasheets, MakeItFrom for verifiable property numbers, ASM Handbook, ISO standards. Museum holdings draw from the Met, MAD, V&A, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Newark Museum of Art, British Museum, Heard Museum, Smithsonian NMAI, Eiteljorg Museum, Philadelphia Museum of Art, Cranbrook Art Museum, and Grand Rapids Art Museum — collection-record permalinks only, designer overview pages and exhibition listings excluded. Voice blocks now ride on every entry kind — material, process, application, and finish — and include Ruskin on iron, Anni Albers on twining, Greg Lynn on the shred-and-teeth NURBS lineage, Pugin on the metal that won't be hammered, Barthes / Yanagi / Benjamin channeled within their philosophy; Sparke, Bürdek, Forty, Conway, Schröpfer, Minshall, von Busch, Lefteri, Pat Pruitt, Mary Lee Hu, Tom Joyce, Albert Paley, and the rest of the contemporary makers quoted verbatim with citation. All cited.
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