It is interesting that a billet would have a perfect transition of color that would be night and day with only a small distance(a clean resaw and surface, removing 1/8" or less. More and the bookmatch would suffer). If one face was contaminated, or exposed to light differently than the other, it could make sense. However the effect would have to run deep enough to remain consistant after carving and surfacing. All seem unlikely, at least it would seem you would be aware of these potential causes. There is also the possibility that one side was joined upside down, but again you would know and should be able to detect that even with a really well quartered piece(the figure would be the clue).
There are a couple types of wood bleach that could be used if it is either coloration or if it is contamination, but you need to figure out what the cause was. Also you would want to test anything you do on off cuts from the piece, or at a minimum sample test on the back side. Before I would go that far, I would expose the surface to air and some sunlight(avoiding heating it up much, if you expose it to the sun). Then you can also look at finish coloration, but you are going to have a hard time dealing with the line at the joint. Trying to color only one side is not likely to work well, but a bit of color in the finish will act as an overall distraction from the harsh transition.
All that said, if it is just the direction of the grain and the way light is reflected. These things offer nothing(coloration, may adjust a bit of the look, but again as a distraction). It is not far fetched that the face grain could be angled, even if the billet was squared to avoid for drying damage or adjust for distortion, the billet could have runnout. If the billet is very white, the medium runnout would be notable.
Good luck with it, Rich
|