The questions people actually ask — on forums, in emails, at 11pm before checking out — answered straight. Anything else, contact us: a real person replies.
Frequently Asked Questions
Buying Online
Is it a mistake to buy a $3,000 table online from a brand I've never heard of?
It's the right question — furniture forums are full of people asking it. Here's what makes it a calculated decision rather than a gamble with us: a 90-day return window on standard catalog pieces, a limited lifetime warranty on structural craftsmanship, and payment through Shopify's PCI-compliant checkout — your card details never touch our servers, and standard chargeback protections apply.
You can also order a physical walnut sample to feel the wood and finish before committing, and every product page carries dimension drawings, not just styled photos. And email us a question first — the reply won't read like a script, which tells you more about a company than any badge on a website.
How can I tell it's really solid walnut and not veneer or MDF?
The forum-approved checks work in the first ten minutes after delivery — no tools. Weight: solid walnut is heavy; a dining top alone takes two people. Edges: real boards show grain wrapping continuously over the edge; veneer shows a thin dark skin ending in a seam. Underside: look beneath — it should be the same wood, not a different material or a laminate sheet. Pattern: natural grain never repeats; printed "wood" does.
Bonus check: end grain. Where a board ends you should see growth rings running through the thickness. If anything fails, photograph it — that's exactly what the 90-day return window is for.
Why is solid walnut furniture so expensive?
Because the lumber is expensive before anyone builds anything. Walnut grows slowly, supply is genuinely limited, and furniture-grade work uses FAS-grade boards — the top grade, with a low yield per log. Solid FAS walnut lumber alone can cost more than an entire "walnut-finish" product from a big-box store, which is stained rubberwood or veneer over MDF.
As for why we're cheaper than showroom brands for the same wood: no retail rent, no sales commissions, no distributor margin. You're paying for the board, the joinery, and the finish — not the lease.
Will my piece look exactly like the photos?
Same design, same tone family — but not identical, and we'd rather tell you now. No two walnut boards share the same grain; your tabletop is a one-off composition. That's the point of solid wood, not a defect.
Our photos show real production pieces, not renders. Expect the same depth of color with your own grain pattern. Ordering pieces that need to sit together? Tell us at checkout and we'll match boards.
What if it won't fit through my door, stairwell, or elevator?
Measure before you order — this is the most preventable disaster in furniture buying. Every product page lists dimensions; compare the largest piece against your narrowest doorway, tightest stair turn, and elevator depth. Tables ship with legs detached, which usually solves the width problem.
Tricky access — walk-up, narrow hallway? Email us your measurements before ordering and we'll check them against the package sizes. A preference-based return carries return shipping costs, so ten minutes with a tape measure is the best money you'll never spend.
The Wood
Isn't walnut softer than oak? Is it really tough enough for a dining table?
Yes, oak is harder — walnut measures about 1,010 lbf on the Janka scale, red oak about 1,290. Woodworking forums debate this constantly, so here's the honest translation: that difference matters if your household regularly drops cast iron on the table. For plates, laptops, elbows, and homework, 1,010 lbf is comfortably enough.
Two things the hardness number doesn't capture: walnut's grain visually hides small wear far better than pale woods, and — because of the finish we use — dents and scratches in walnut are spot-repairable, which matters more over ten years than 25% more dent resistance. Oak is a fine wood; it's just a coarser, more rustic look. People choose walnut for the color and figure, and its durability is not the compromise forums sometimes fear.
Will walnut fade in the sun?
It changes — and here's the straight answer, because this surprises people: unlike cherry (which darkens), walnut gradually lightens with UV exposure, mellowing from dark chocolate toward a warmer, honey-toned brown over years. It doesn't go gray or look worn; the grain gains warmth and depth, and most owners end up preferring the mellowed color.
It happens slowly — months to years — and everything in the room shifts together. To slow it, keep the piece out of harsh direct sunlight or rotate items on the surface occasionally so it ages evenly (a lamp left in one spot for two years can leave a 'shadow'). That rotation tip is the one forum posters wish they'd known.
Is the finish shiny?
No — satin-matte, low sheen. Hard wax oil soaks into the wood instead of coating it, so light sits in the grain rather than bouncing off a film. If you're picturing glossy lacquered furniture, this is the opposite — the surface looks and feels like wood, because it is.
Ordering & Production
I just placed my order. What actually happens now?
Within a day you'll get a written order confirmation — read it. That document is what we build from; if a size, finish, or address is wrong, reply immediately and we'll fix it before production.
Then your boards are selected and the build begins. You'll hear from us at the milestones that matter — production start, finishing, and freight booking with your delivery window. No news in between means your piece is on the bench, not forgotten.
Can I customize dimensions or the finish?
Usually yes — everything is made to order, so a longer top or a different depth is a conversation, not an exception. Email us what you need; we'll confirm feasibility and price before you pay anything.
One mechanism protects you: your piece is built exactly to the written confirmation. When you customize, check every change appears in that email — what's written is what gets built. Custom pieces are final sale, so this check matters.
Why does it take 6–10 weeks?
Because your piece doesn't exist yet. We build to order: boards selected, joined, sanded, hand-finished, and inspected for your order specifically. The trade: you wait longer than warehouse furniture, and in exchange nothing has been sitting in a container getting dinged, and the piece was never built down to a warehouse price point.
Hard deadline — move-in, holiday? Tell us when you order and we'll be straight about whether it's realistic.
Any way to get it faster?
Sometimes — ask. Depending on the build queue, we can occasionally deliver sooner; email your deadline before ordering and you'll get a straight yes or no.
What we won't do is compress finishing and curing time. A rushed finish is a worse piece, and you'd feel it for years.
Can I change or cancel my order?
Within 1 business day of ordering: yes — changes and cancellations are free. Email us and it's done.
After that first business day, a 10% cancellation fee may apply — by then materials are being allocated and your build is being planned. Once the piece enters final production, changes are no longer possible, but cancellation may still be available before shipping with a 15% fee — ask us. After shipping, cancellation closes and the 90-day return policy takes over. Short version: if something changes on your end, write us the same day.
What if my order is delayed?
We tell you early — not after the window has quietly passed. Wood is natural and finishing can't be rushed in humid weather, so occasionally a build runs past estimate. You'll get a straight answer on the new date, and on standard catalog orders you can wait or cancel for a full refund. We'd rather lose an order than surprise you in week eleven.
Can I pay in installments?
Yes — Klarna pay-over-time is available at checkout. Details and eligibility show on the product page and at checkout.
Delivery & Damage
How does a 100-pound table actually get to me?
By freight carrier, packed for it: corner protection, edge padding, crating on large pieces. The carrier contacts you to schedule a delivery window — this isn't a parcel dropped on a porch.
White-glove delivery is available on larger pieces: brought inside, assembled, placed where you want it. Hard access? Tell us at ordering and we'll plan for it.
How should I prepare for delivery day?
Ten minutes of prep: clear the path from door to room — hallway corners, stair turns, rugs that slide. Know where the piece is going before the crew arrives. Hard floors you care about? Lay a blanket at the assembly spot.
If access is tight, measure the route one last time against the package dimensions. And keep pets somewhere calm — a heavy tabletop and an excited dog are a bad mix.
What should I do before signing for the delivery?
The two minutes that protect you completely: inspect the packaging before you sign. Crushed corner, puncture, re-taped box — write it on the delivery receipt before signing; 'box damaged on corner' is enough. Photograph anything questionable, packaging included.
That note on the receipt is what makes any damage claim frictionless. Sign clean with no note and claims get slower for everyone. Two minutes. Worth it.
It arrived damaged. Now what?
Contact us at support@walnutry.com as soon as possible — same day is best — with photos of the damage and the packaging. Then stop worrying, because the rest is our job. You never fight the freight carrier; we do. If a piece is severely damaged at delivery, you can simply refuse the shipment and email us.
One deadline matters: if damage only shows up after unpacking (concealed damage), report it within 5 days of delivery — freight carriers impose strict claim windows, and reporting inside that window preserves the strongest remedies. Depending on what happened we'll repair, send a replacement part, replace the piece, or refund — at our cost. Keep the packaging until it's resolved. And know that solid walnut is forgiving: many transit scuffs are fully repairable with the finish we use, and we'll walk you through it or handle it.
Hardware or parts missing?
Email a photo of what you received and we'll ship the missing pieces immediately — no interrogation. Don't force an assembly with a missing bolt; properly torqued joints are what the lifetime structural warranty is built on.
I'll be away around the delivery window. Can you hold my order?
Yes — tell us your dates as soon as you know them. We'll either hold the finished piece before freight is booked, or schedule the carrier window for after you're back. What we want to avoid is your furniture sitting in a freight terminal — that's where damage and confusion happen.
Returns & Warranty
How does returning heavy furniture actually work?
Step one, always: email support@walnutry.com first — returns need prior authorization, and furniture sent back without it can't be accepted. Include your order number, the item, the reason, and photos of the piece and packaging. Once approved, we coordinate the freight pickup from your home — you don't haul anything anywhere. Repack the piece (this is why we say keep the packaging until you're sure), the carrier collects it, and after inspection your refund is issued.
Costs, honestly: for preference-based returns — size, color, changed your mind — you cover return freight, and the outbound shipping we actually paid (including white-glove fees, even on free-shipping orders) is deducted from the refund. We confirm the exact figure in writing when the return is approved, before anything ships. Damaged or defective pieces return free, no deductions. Custom pieces are final sale — and repack carefully: return-transit damage from insufficient packaging can reduce the refund.
When do I actually get my money back?
Once your return is received and inspected, we'll confirm the approval — and the refund is issued to your original payment method within 10 business days. Your bank, card issuer, or financing provider may take a few extra days to post it.
You'll get a confirmation email the moment it's processed, so you're never guessing. If more than 15 business days pass after approval with no refund, email us and we'll chase it.
What does the lifetime warranty actually cover — and not cover?
Covered: structural craftsmanship under normal home use — joinery, frame, legs, load-bearing construction. If a properly used joint fails in year two or year twenty, that's ours to fix.
Not covered: surface wear (scratches, dents, patina — though most are repairable), misuse and accidents, and damage from extreme environments — a piece against a radiator, or months in an unheated cabin. Claims: email photos, we assess, we repair or replace. No forms designed to make you give up.
My table wobbles or a joint loosened after a few weeks. Defect?
Usually not — two checks first. The floor: old houses are rarely level; try another spot. The bolts: re-torque about two weeks after assembly. Solid wood settles into your home's humidity and connections can ease slightly — that re-tighten is normal, not a flaw.
Still moving after both? Now it's ours: send a short video and we'll take it from there under warranty.
My last wood table cracked in winter. How do I stop that happening again?
That crack almost certainly came from forced-air heating driving indoor humidity below 30% for months — the most common killer of solid wood furniture, and preventable. Our boards are kiln-dried to furniture moisture levels and the joinery is built to let panels move with the seasons, but no solid wood survives a radiator against its side or desert-dry air all winter.
The fix costs $10: a hygrometer. Keep the room roughly 40–60% humidity — in practice, a humidifier running in winter. Keep the piece off heat vents. Do that, and cracking is rare; if a structural crack appears under normal conditions anyway, that's a warranty conversation and we'll stand behind it.
Durability & Care
Is an oil finish really durable enough for a dining table? Wouldn't polyurethane be tougher?
The honest version of a debate that fills woodworking forums: polyurethane is more waterproof, full stop. We still chose hard wax oil, deliberately — because the failure modes are opposite. When poly eventually scratches or clouds, the fix is stripping and refinishing the entire top. When an oil finish wears, the fix is wiping on more oil — twenty minutes, at home, invisible.
Day to day the difference is small: wipe spills within a moment, use trivets for hot pans, coasters for sweating glasses. In exchange you get a surface that feels like wood instead of plastic, zero-VOC in your home, and a table that's renewable forever rather than perfect until it isn't.
How do I get water rings or white marks out?
A white ring means moisture sat in the finish, not the wood — usually fixable. First: wipe dry and give it a day; light marks often breathe out on their own. Still there? Wipe the spot with a little hard wax oil on a soft cloth and buff — that redistributes the finish and typically erases the ring.
A dark ring means water reached the wood — that needs a light local sand and a wipe of oil, still a home job on this finish. Prevention is boring but real: coasters under sweating glasses, and don't let standing water sit overnight.
We have young kids. How badly will this scratch — and can I fix it?
It will pick up marks — every real dining table does, walnut included. What matters is what happens next: because the finish penetrates rather than films, most scratches disappear with a light local sand and a wipe of oil, invisibly. The forum trick even works: rub the meat of a raw walnut along a light scratch and its oils darken the mark.
Compare that to veneer or lacquer, where one deep scratch is permanent. Homework years are survivable — and a table that gains a little history and can be reset at any time beats one you spend a decade protecting.
Is the finish safe for kids and food?
Yes. Zero-VOC natural hard wax oil, food-safe when cured — plates, cut fruit, toddler hands, all fine. And there's no MDF or particleboard anywhere in the furniture, so no formaldehyde-based construction, period.
New pieces carry a faint natural scent — wood and plant oil, not solvent — that fades within days. If chemical smell burned you on past furniture purchases, that smell comes from lacquers and glue-heavy board construction. We use neither.
Is walnut safe around pets?
Finished walnut furniture, yes — a dog sleeping against a walnut bed frame is not at risk. The caution you may have read involves juglone, a compound in the living tree, fresh shavings, and nut hulls — a hazard if a dog eats that raw material, which your furniture is not.
Sensible rule for any hardwood: discourage chewing; splinters are the real danger to a determined chewer. And the zero-VOC finish means no solvent residues in the household.
What's the actual maintenance burden?
Lower than people fear. Weekly: dust with a soft cloth. Spills: wipe promptly — water-resistant, not waterproof. Hot and wet things: trivets and coasters. That's the routine.
Every 1–3 years, wipe on a hard wax oil refresher (Rubio Monocoat or OSMO) — a 20-minute job that resets the surface. No professional refinishing, ever. A piece that gets this treatment outlasts every appliance in your house.
If I add matching pieces next year, will they match what I have?
Closely — with one honest caveat. Walnut is natural, so no two boards are identical, and your existing piece will have begun mellowing toward its honey patina while the new one arrives at day-one color. They converge as the new piece catches up.
Tell us it's a match order: we'll select boards in the same tone family. Within a season of shared light, most owners can't tell which piece came first.
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