I mentioned in a response to Travis on the Verawood box that the figure or lack thereof is important to turned boxes. I have a lot of curly maple that is highly figured on the side grain but the end grain is completely blah.
In an attempt to make use of this wood I used some East Indian Rosewood that was dark and featureless, or almost featureless, on the side grain and had no visible grain features at all on the end grain to make a lid for a curly maple box and then inlaid a piece of birdseye maple.
The body of this box is turned from curly big leaf maple, the lid is from East Indian Rosewood and the inlay is birdseye maple inlaid as side grain. The box finished up at 2 1/2" tall and 3" in diameter.
In an attempt to make use of this wood I used some East Indian Rosewood that was dark and featureless, or almost featureless, on the side grain and had no visible grain features at all on the end grain to make a lid for a curly maple box and then inlaid a piece of birdseye maple.
The body of this box is turned from curly big leaf maple, the lid is from East Indian Rosewood and the inlay is birdseye maple inlaid as side grain. The box finished up at 2 1/2" tall and 3" in diameter.