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Warmest greeting, we welcome you to visit our website. Our company manufacture indoor furniture product
Bali Spot International Co., Ltd main products are: arm chair, bar, bed, buffet, coffee table, divider, drawer, fence, gazebo, lamp, lounger, nesting, planter, side bed, side table, sofa, terrace set, trunk, tv cabinet, wardrobe, water tap, bar stool, bench, cabinet, captive, console, cupboard, desk, mirror, occasional chair, rack, side cabinet, side chair, table, basket, bed head, console table, dining set, living set, love seat, stool, bag, ettagere, hanger, hanging rack, magazine rack, trolley, vase, bed side cabinet, screens,stand
For years our commitment to providing customers, with the best quality products at reasonable prices, on time delivery, and the most careful attention the needs and expectation of our customers, this made our company a leader in manufacturing of Bamboo furniture, bamboo teak furniture, coco wood furniture, coffee wood furniture, ethnic furniture, kids furniture, natural fiber furniture, panel furniture, rattan furniture, recycled teak furniture, teak root furniture, teak wood furniture.
The company has been established in the year 1995, located in eastern part of Java Island with 10,000 square meter land and 2,000 square meter of covered building. Our company can make around 30 container 40 feet/month
We hope that you would find as much pleasure in the use of our products as we have found in producing them
- A brief description of Rattan
Here's nothing like the natural beauty of fine rattan furniture. For centuries this distinct style of rattan furniture has held a place of honor in homes, hotels and restaurants, favored by many of the top interior designers for its enduring character and eclectic design.
Rattan is a vine that grows in the tropical forests of the Far East.
The true rattan are restricted to the Old World tropics and subtropics
Rattan is one of the oldest natural furniture materials in use today. Bamboo has characteristic which is hollow, but rattan is a solid timber vine that grows in the jungles of Indonesia
Rattan are climbing palms that provide the raw material for the cane-furniture industry. The trade in rattans and canes is thought to be worth about £3 billion annually
Rattan have long and very flexible stems that need support. The longest cane ever recorded was over 175 m long.
Rattan is one of nature's strongest materials. Rattan will not splinter or break and is ideal for making furniture. Once molded, solid rattan retains its contours permanently
Rattan usually has whips, either on the leaf sheaths or at the ends of the leaves. These whips are armed with grouped, grapnel-like spines and play a major role in supporting the rattan as it climbs into the forest canopy. It is these terrible whips that make the scientific collection of rattan so unpleasant and are in part responsible for making this a poorly studied and still only partially understood group of plants
Peel, is the outer skin of the rattan pole and traditionally is used to wrap joints.
- Production of rattan and wicker furniture
The rattan is placed in a steam box which is necessary for bending the rattan and making it more pliable. Jigs are constructed for producing specific shapes. When the rattan is steaming hot, it is bent to fit into the jig. Once cooled, the rattan will remain in that shape.
Rattan gatherers need to pull the canes down from the forest canopy and remove the spiny sheaths, leaves and whips. Rattan harvesting is thus a rather dangerous business - dead branches can be dislodged as the rattan is pulled and ants and wasps can often be disturbed in the process.
In Indonesia rattan are used for manufacture of baskets, mats and rattan furniture. Undoubtedly rattan remains the most important source of material for making furniture in the South-east Asian region; however, as the wild resource becomes scarce, other materials such as split bamboo are used as substitutes. In the past much, raw cane rattan has been exported to many countries, however now day some producing countries have introduced export tariffs or export bans for raw cane to encourage the manufacture of rattan furniture within the producing countries, thereby adding value to the exported product, and also helping to conserve stocks of wild rattan. However, these bans have also put extreme pressure on stocks of rattans in countries where cane export is not controlled, resulting in severe over-exploitation and even disappearance of the wild resource
90% of the rattan that enters world trade has been collected from the wild from tropical rain forests. Recently the habitat of rattan has decreased rapidly in extent over the last few decades and there is now a very real shortage of supply. In the mid 1970s, forest departments in South-east Asia became aware of the vulnerability of rattan supply and began investigations aimed at safeguarding the long term supply of canes for the industry. Cultivation of canes presents the best possibility for the future. Early research examined pre-existing cultivation. In one small area of Indonesian Borneo rattan has been cultivated in permanent rattan gardens on land adjacent to rivers that flood severely and for prolonged periods. This land, that is more or less unsuitable for any other permanent form of agriculture because of the flooding and very acid soils, appears to be ideal for the cultivation of one rattan, Calamus trachycoleus. Here, villagers have developed a method of cultivation that has been used as a model for rattan cultivation elsewhere, whether on flooded or dry land. However, this species has a cane of small diameter (6-12 mm); large diameter canes (in excess of 18 mm) are needed to produce the framework of cane chairs, and a major focus of rattan research has been to find large diameter canes that are suitable for domestication and cultivation in a variety of habitats.
In the late 1975s commercial estates of rattan were established in Malaysia. Commercial rattan planting is still a risky business as there is still so much that is unknown about the growing of rattan. However, growth rates in the new estates have been amazing - small diameter Calamus trachycoleus and the best large diameter cane Calamus manan have both been recorded as growing as fast as over 6 m a year. Several estates have already reached harvestable age and the financial returns from the estates seem promising. There are also some unexpected benefits from rattan planting.
In order to grow properly rattan has to be planted under some sort of tree cover, such as logged-over forest, secondary forest, fruit orchards, tree plantations or, even, rubber estates. Thus rattan planting preserves tree cover, and along with tree cover, where it is semi-natural forest, wildlife is also maintained. One of the highest populations of orang-utan in Borneo is in a rattan estate and over half the wild species of rattan recorded for Sarawak have been recorded as occurring wild within the boundaries of another rattan estate. However, perhaps the most exciting potential of rattan is as a small-holder crop. Some rattan lends themselves to cultivation on a small scale under fruit trees or in rubber gardens.
With over 600 species to choose from and a huge geographical, altitudinal and ecological range, choosing the right cane for the right habitat is clearly a complex process. What is certain is that the basic classification of rattans is of great importance to the further development of the wild resource - we must know what species we are trying to cultivate and how to distinguish it from other species of rattans at all stages of development from seed to mature plant. Kew plays a vital role in the basic research on rattans in providing the taxonomic framework for development. Kew scientists now have wide experience in rattans, their natural history, economic potential and cultivation requirements.
Current research needs for the further development of rattan that are being addressed at Kew include the search for more species suitable for plantations. At present we know enough to cultivate a mere four or five of the 600 different species of rattan, and these are all species of the ever wet lowlands of the Malay Archipelago.
- A brief description of Wicker
Wicker, although a classic, natural material with centuries of history, works well for the furniture buyer who wants a home reflecting the feel of casual elegance. Wicker furniture offers comfort, versatility and livability.
Wicker refers to products that are made from reed, cane, rush, willow or other natural materials. When wet, these materials are pliable enough to be woven. Wicker and Rattan are natural products with each piece having its own individual, unique qualities. When stained there will be slight differences in hue and color of the wicker furniture and this is part of the beauty of owning a product made from nature
Wicker is a weaving process, not a material. One of the materials used in the weaving process is called rattan core, which comes from the rattan interior. A machine cuts the inside of the rattan pole, into pieces small enough in diameter for the weaving. Due to the nature of this product, splits and discolorations in the rattan poles are to be expected. They even enhance the beauty and uniqueness of these furniture
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