European hornbeam dyed deep black through the full thickness. A clean, even alternative to ebony — dense, stable and ideal for visible structural detail.
Black Hornbeam is European hornbeam (Carpinus betulus) that has been stabilised and dyed right through to a deep, even black. It gives model builders the look of ebony — without the cost, scarcity or the splintering that genuine ebony can bring to thin work.
Hornbeam is one of the hardest and densest woods grown in Europe, with a tight, almost featureless grain. That uniform structure is exactly what makes it cut so cleanly at small dimensions, holding sharp corners and fine edges where coarser dark woods would tear out.
Each piece is dyed and kiln-dried before milling, so the colour runs through the full thickness — sanding or shaping a part won't expose a pale core.
| Species | Carpinus betulus (dyed) |
| Origin | Central Europe |
| Janka Hardness | ~1,780 N (very hard) |
| Density | ~750 kg/m³ (air dried) |
| Grain | Very fine, tight, almost featureless |
| Colour | Deep black, dyed through |
| Texture | Smooth and dense — holds sharp edges |
| Workability | Cuts cleanly; sands and polishes well |
| Moisture content | Below 8% (kiln dried) |
| Tolerance | ±0.10 mm (sheets/strips) / ±0.20 mm (square strips) |