Fifty millimeters. It seems like just a number. But in the world of woodworking and interior design, this dimension possesses an almost magical property—it is universal.50mm round molding is universalIt is no coincidence that it has become the gold standard for dozens of applications: from stair handrails to decorative battens, from furniture elements to architectural accents. This diameter has been found empirically, refined through decades of practice, and confirmed by ergonomic research and the aesthetic intuition of generations of craftsmen.

Why exactly fifty? Because it is the size that comfortably fits in the palm of an adult's hand, creating a reliable sense of control when used as a handrail. Because it is the thickness that does not visually disappear in space, yet does not appear bulky, creating the perfect balance of presence. Because it is the diameter that is efficient in production, allows the use of standard blanks without excessive waste, and provides sufficient strength with reasonable weight. Fifty millimeters is the point where function, aesthetics, economics, and ergonomics converge.

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Ergonomics of round cross-section: why shape matters

Shape is not just a visual characteristic. In the case of molding products, shape determines tactile sensations, ease of use, and safety. A round cross-section with a diameter of fifty millimeters possesses unique ergonomic properties, making it optimal for numerous applications.

Anthropometric foundations

The size of the human hand varies, but the average palm circumference of an adult is 180-220 millimeters. When gripping a round object, the fingers should close or almost close to create a sense of control and reliability. A diameter of fifty millimeters creates a circumference of 157 millimeters, allowing the average hand to confidently grip the object while creating a comfortable gap between the fingertips and the base of the palm.

A handrail that is too thin (thirty-five to forty millimeters) requires excessive finger tension to hold, quickly causing hand fatigue. One that is too thick (sixty-five to seventy millimeters) does not allow the fingers to close, the hand slips, and the sense of control is lost. Fifty millimeters is the comfort zone, where the grip is natural, requires no effort, and ensures maximum safety.

Studies of stair-related injuries show that a properly selected handrail diameter reduces the risk of falling by twenty-five to thirty percent. A person instinctively grabs a handrail when losing balance, and if the handrail is easy to grip, the reaction is faster and the grip is more reliable.

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Tactile Comfort

The round shape has no edges or corners that could cause discomfort during prolonged contact. When the hand slides along a round handrail while moving on stairs, no points of concentrated pressure arise. The load is distributed evenly across the entire contact surface of the palm.

Compare it to a square cross-section of the same size (fifty by fifty millimeters). The edges of a square bar create lines of increased pressure, which during prolonged contact cause discomfort and can leave marks on the palm. A round cross-section lacks this drawback.

Perceived temperature also plays a role. A round surface creates a smaller contact area than a flat one with the same diameter/width, meaning less heat is drawn away from the hand. A round wooden handrail feels warmer and more pleasant to the touch than a square one made of the same wood species.

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Safety in case of a fall

In an emergency—when tripping or losing balance—a person grabs a handrail reflexively, often with great force. A round cross-section minimizes the risk of injuring the palm during such sudden contact. The absence of sharp edges eliminates cuts, abrasions, and bruises to the fingers.

Moreover, the round shape allows the hand to slide along the handrail if it is necessary to quickly change the point of support. A square or rectangular cross-section creates resistance to such sliding, which can lead to loss of control at a critical moment.

Areas of application: where 50 mm round molding works

Round wooden baluster 50 mmIt possesses amazing versatility of application. The same profile can be used in completely different contexts, performing various functions.

Stair handrails: primary function

Historically, the round profile with a diameter of about fifty millimeters evolved precisely as a stair handrail. This is its main, primary function, for which it is optimized in all parameters.

A stair handrail is subjected to constant loads—people lean on it when ascending and descending, grab it when losing balance, and slide their hand along it to guide movement. A round cross-section of fifty millimeters ideally handles all these tasks.

Material matters. An oak handrail with a diameter of fifty millimeters can withstand a load of up to one hundred and twenty kilograms without sagging over a span of one meter between mounting points. This is a multiple safety margin compared to regulatory requirements (thirty kilograms per meter for residential buildings).

The length of standard round molding blanks ranges from two to four meters, allowing the handrail to be installed on most stair flights without joints. A joint is always a weak point, both structurally and visually. A solid handrail is stronger and more aesthetically pleasing.

Balcony and terrace railings

Railings for balconies, terraces, attics, and accessible roofs also use round molding as a handrail. Here, the requirement for weather resistance is added—the handrail is exposed to rain, snow, temperature fluctuations, and ultraviolet light.

For outdoor use, oak is optimal—a species with natural resistance to rot due to its high tannin content. An oak handrail with a quality protective coating (oil-wax or yacht varnish) serves outdoors for twenty to thirty years without loss of functionality.

Larch is another candidate for outdoor handrails. Its high resin content makes larch practically invulnerable to moisture and biological attack. The only drawback is its tendency to warp with sudden humidity changes, which requires thorough drying and stabilization of the blanks.

Rods for wardrobes and closets

An unexpected but very logical application of round molding with a diameter of fifty millimeters is rods for hanging clothes in wardrobes, sliding-door closets, and dressing rooms. This diameter is optimal for placing hangers—the hanger hook easily fits onto the rod, slides along it without jamming, yet does not wobble excessively.

The strength of a fifty-millimeter rod is sufficient to hold thirty to forty hangers with heavy winter clothing over a span of one meter without noticeable sagging. This exceeds real operational loads with a good safety margin.

Aesthetics also play a role. A round wooden rod in a wardrobe looks significantly more noble than a chrome pipe or aluminum profile. Wood creates a feeling of warmth, naturalness, and artisanal quality. Rods made of walnut or stained oak are especially effective when combined with white or gray wardrobe walls.

Decorative slats and rails

Modern interior design actively uses wooden slats of various cross-sections to create accent walls, partitions, and decorative panels.Round baluster 50creates an interesting visual effect — round elements, arranged at a certain pitch, form a rhythmic composition, a play of light and shadow, and create a sense of volume and texture.

Vertical arrangement of round slats visually increases the height of a room, creates elongated shadows, and adds dynamism to the space. Horizontal arrangement — widens, calms, and structures the wall. Diagonal arrangement — adds movement, unconventionality, and artistry.

The installation pitch of round slats determines the character of the composition. A close pitch (one hundred to one hundred twenty millimeters between axes) creates an almost solid surface with narrow gaps, a lattice effect. A medium pitch (one hundred fifty to two hundred millimeters) — a balance of fullness and airiness. A sparse pitch (two hundred fifty to three hundred millimeters) — separate verticals that accentuate the space.

Round slats work as partitions, zoning space without complete separation. Between the living room and dining room, between the hallway and corridor, between the bedroom and wardrobe — round wooden slats create a visual boundary while maintaining a sense of openness and spatial connectivity.

Kitchen rails and storage systems

In the kitchen, round molding with a diameter of fifty millimeters is used as a rail — a horizontal rod fixed to the wall or under wall cabinets, on which hooks, holders, and baskets for kitchen utensils, spices, and towels are hung.

A wooden rail creates a warm, homey accent in the kitchen, where cold materials predominate — stainless steel, glass, ceramic, plastic. An oak or ash rail combined with a wooden countertop creates material unity and harmony.

Resistance to moisture and temperature is important. The kitchen is an area with high humidity, water splashes, grease, and temperature fluctuations. The coating of a wooden rail must be maximally protective — a hard polyurethane varnish or oil-wax with a high wax content. Periodic renewal of the coating (every two to three years) maintains protective properties.

Furniture elements

Furniture designers use round molding as a structural and decorative element. Table and chair legs, crossbars, rails, decorative inserts — anywhere a round element with a diameter of about fifty millimeters is required.

Turned table legs with diameter transitions, thickenings, and waists start with a round molding blank with a diameter of fifty to sixty millimeters. Turning creates a decorative profile, but the base blank is a standard round profile.

The crossbars of chairs, on which the feet of a seated person rest, traditionally have a diameter of forty to fifty millimeters. This creates a comfortable footrest and sufficient strength with minimal structural weight.

Wood species: how material choice affects properties

Round balustrade 50 mmis made from various wood species, each of which has unique characteristics that affect the operational and aesthetic qualities of the finished product.

Oak: unmatched strength

Oak is the benchmark species for round molding. A density of seven hundred kilograms per cubic meter ensures high strength, hardness, and wear resistance. An oak handrail withstands intensive use for decades without visible wear or loss of surface smoothness.

The texture of oak is expressive — contrasting annual rings create a beautiful pattern, which on a round cross-section appears as alternating light and dark bands curving around the circumference. This adds visual interest and depth.

Natural resistance to biological degradation makes oak ideal for outdoor use and for rooms with high humidity. Tannins contained in oak wood protect against rot, fungus, and insects.

The color of oak varies from light golden (young wood) to dark brown (mature wood, stained oak). Toning expands the palette — from bleached oak (grayish-white) to wenge (almost black).

The disadvantage of oak is its high cost. Oak round molding costs forty to sixty percent more than pine, and twenty to thirty percent more than beech. But it is an investment in durability — an oak product lasts two to three times longer.

Ash: Contrasting Beauty

Ash is close to oak in strength characteristics and surpasses it in some parameters. Density six hundred eighty kilograms per cubic meter, high impact toughness, elasticity. Ash bends excellently after steaming, which is important for creating curved elements.

The texture of ash is even more contrasting than that of oak. Light and dark bands alternate with high frequency, creating a dynamic, expressive pattern. On a round cross-section, this looks like a spiral pattern running around the cylinder.

The color of ash ranges from light gray to yellowish-brown. Ash takes toning perfectly, allowing for both light Scandinavian interiors and dark classic ones.

The disadvantage is that without protective treatment, ash is less resistant to biological degradation than oak. High-quality antiseptic impregnation and a final coating are mandatory.

Beech: uniformity and affordability

Beech is the optimal balance of price and quality. Density six hundred fifty kilograms per cubic meter, sufficient strength for most applications, uniform fine-pored structure.

The uniformity of beech is both an advantage and a feature. The texture is almost unnoticeable, the wood has an even pinkish hue without contrasting bands. This makes beech ideal for painting, toning — the color lays evenly, without spots, without the texture showing through the paint.

For interiors where a pure color without wood grain is required, beech is indispensable. A white painted handrail, black, blue, green — any color on beech looks even and saturated.

The disadvantage of beech is its increased hygroscopicity. Beech actively reacts to changes in air humidity and can deform with significant fluctuations. Not recommended for outdoor use or for unheated rooms.

Pine: an economical option

Pine is the most affordable wood species. Density is five hundred kilograms per cubic meter, soft wood, easy to work with. Pine round molding costs two to two and a half times less than oak.

Is pine suitable for handrails? With reservations. For stairs with low load — in a country house, in an attic where the stairs are rarely used — pine is quite acceptable. For intensively used stairs in a residential house, a pine handrail will last fifteen to twenty years, after which replacement will be required due to wear, dent formation.

Pine texture is expressive — the contrast between earlywood and latewood, resin ducts create a characteristic pattern. Color — from light yellow to reddish. Pine takes stains excellently, allowing imitation of more expensive species (though a professional will always tell the difference).

For decorative slats, rods in closets, rails, pine is quite suitable — here loads are less, wear is minimal. It is important to choose high-grade pine without large knots, resin pockets.

Larch: for exterior use

Larch is a unique species, combining the strength of hardwoods with natural moisture resistance. Density six hundred fifty to six hundred seventy kilograms per cubic meter, high resin content, which preserves the wood.

Larch handrails for balconies, terraces, exterior stairs last thirty to forty years without rotting, without loss of strength. Even without protective coating, larch gradually silvers (acquires a noble gray hue), but does not rot.

Larch color — from yellowish-brown to reddish-brown. Texture is pronounced, with contrasting annual rings. On a round cross-section creates a beautiful pattern.

Disadvantage — difficulty of processing (high density, abundance of resin that clogs tools), tendency to warp with sudden humidity changes. Requires thorough drying and stabilization of blanks.

Production technology: how the perfect circle is born

How does a rectangular timber become a perfectly round molding with a diameter of fifty millimeters? Modern woodworking technology offers several methods, each with its own advantages.

Milling on a four-sided machine

The main industrial method is milling on a four-sided planer with round milling heads. The blank — a square bar with a cross-section of sixty-five by sixty-five millimeters — is fed into the machine, where four cutters, positioned at ninety-degree angles to each other, simultaneously process all four sides.

The cutters have a special profile — a radius recess that forms a rounded surface. As the blank moves through the machine, the cutters remove the corners, turning the square into an octagon, then a hexadecagon, and finally into a circle. Modern milling heads with high rotation speed (six to eight thousand revolutions per minute) create a surface close to a perfect circle.

After milling, the round molding undergoes sanding on a special sanding machine with circular feed. An abrasive belt wraps around the cylinder from all sides, evenly sanding the surface to perfect smoothness. Abrasive grit — from P120 for primary sanding to P240 for finish.

Diameter tolerance for quality round molding is ±0.3 millimeters, which meets requirements for furniture and architectural products. Deviation from straightness — no more than one millimeter per two meters of length.

Lathe turning for small batches

For manufacturing small batches or non-standard lengths, lathe turning is used. The blank is secured in a lathe, a cutter forms the cylindrical surface. Lathe turning allows obtaining a perfect circle with accuracy up to hundredths of a millimeter.

Disadvantage of the method — low productivity. Processing one linear meter on a lathe takes fifteen to twenty minutes versus two to three minutes on a four-sided milling machine. Therefore, lathe turning is used for exclusive orders, for products with variable diameter (tapered elements), for hard and expensive species (walnut, exotics).

Geometry Quality Control

Checking geometric parameters of round molding includes measuring diameter at several points along the length with calipers or a micrometer. Diameter must be constant with accuracy ±0.3 millimeters. Checking straightness — laying on a flat slab, measuring maximum gap between slab and molding.

Checking smoothness — visually and tactilely. Tear-outs, fiber pull-outs, roughness are unacceptable. The hand should slide over the surface without catching, without feeling unevenness.

Wood moisture is checked with a moisture meter. For interior products, permissible moisture is eight to twelve percent. A batch with moisture above fifteen percent is rejected — such products will warp, crack after installation.

Coatings and finishes: protection and aesthetics

Round molding is rarely used without a finish coating. The coating performs two functions: protective (protects wood from moisture, dirt, mechanical damage) and aesthetic (emphasizes texture, gives desired shade, creates tactile sensations).

Oil finishes: naturalness and tactility

Oil is a traditional finish for wooden handrails. Oil finish penetrates the wood, does not create a surface film, preserves the natural texture and tactility of wood. An oiled handrail is warm, pleasant to the touch, not slippery.

Modern wood oils are complex compositions based on natural oils (linseed, tung) with addition of hard waxes, driers (drying accelerators), UV filters. They create a stronger and more durable coating than pure linseed oil of the past.

Applying oil: surface is sanded with P240 abrasive, cleaned of dust, oil is applied with a brush or cloth, rubbed in with circular motions. Absorption time fifteen to twenty minutes, then excess is removed with a dry cloth. After four to six hours, a second coat is applied. Full curing after twenty-four to forty-eight hours.

Oil finish requires periodic renewal — once every two to three years for handrails, once every five to seven years for decorative elements. Renewal is simple — light sanding with P320 abrasive, application of a fresh coat of oil.

Lacquer coatings: maximum protection

Lacquer creates a durable surface film, providing maximum protection from moisture, dirt, wear. For round molding, water-based polyurethane lacquers are used — eco-friendly, without strong odor, fast-drying.

Lacquer is applied in two to three coats with intermediate sanding with P320-P400 abrasive. First coat — primer, it raises the wood grain. After drying (two to three hours), surface is sanded, removing raised grain. Second and third coats — finish, creating a smooth, durable film.

The gloss level of varnish is chosen depending on its purpose. For handrails, matte or semi-matte varnish is optimal — it is non-slip, does not glare in the light, and is pleasant to the touch. Glossy varnish creates a shiny surface that is visually impressive but slippery and shows every scratch.

Varnish coating is more durable than oil — ten to fifteen years without renewal. However, it is more difficult to repair — in case of local damage, the entire element has to be re-varnished; it is impossible to renew only the damaged area.

Wax: classic technique

Wax coating is an ancient technique experiencing a renaissance. Wax (beeswax, carnauba) is applied to the wood and rubbed to a shine with a soft cloth. It creates a silky, tactilely pleasant surface with a soft sheen.

Wax is less protective than oil or varnish. It does not penetrate deeply into the wood and wears off easily under intensive use. For handrails, wax coating requires renewal every six to twelve months. However, the renewal procedure is elementary — apply wax, rub to a shine.

Wax is often used as a finishing layer over oil (oil-wax system). Oil provides protection and nourishment for the wood, while wax gives a beautiful silky surface and additional moisture protection.

Staining and bleaching

To change the color of wood, stains (dyes on water, alcohol, or oil bases) are used. Stain penetrates the wood, coloring it while preserving the visibility of the grain.

Water-based stains — eco-friendly, odorless, wide range of shades. Disadvantage — they raise the wood grain, requiring subsequent sanding.

Alcohol-based stains — dry quickly (fifteen to thirty minutes), do not raise the grain, but have a strong odor and require good ventilation during application.

Oil-based stains — penetrate deeply, provide an even, rich color, take a long time to dry (four to six hours).

After staining, a protective coating — oil or varnish — must be applied. Stain itself does not protect the wood.

Installation of round molding: technical solutions

How to properly secure round molding in various applications? There are many specialized fastening systems.

Handrail brackets

Handrails are attached to the wall or to balusters using special brackets. Wall brackets for round handrails with a diameter of fifty millimeters have a semicircular recess with a rubber gasket that tightly grips the handrail, eliminating play and squeaking.

The distance between brackets is determined by the wood species and expected load. For oak — eight hundred to one thousand millimeters. For pine — six hundred to eight hundred millimeters. More frequent bracket installation prevents handrail sagging under load.

The installation height of a wall handrail is nine hundred millimeters from floor level (or from the front edge of the step for stair handrails). This height is optimal for a person of average height, providing comfortable support.

The distance from the wall to the handrail axis is fifty to sixty millimeters. This provides a gap of thirty-five to forty-five millimeters between the wall and the handrail, sufficient for the hand to grip the handrail without touching the wall.

Connectors for extending length

If a handrail longer than the standard blank (four meters) is required, connectors are used — metal or wooden elements that join two pieces of molding end-to-end.

A metal connector is a cylindrical pin with a diameter of twenty-five to thirty millimeters and a length of one hundred to one hundred twenty millimeters. A blind hole for the connector is drilled into the ends of both handrail pieces, and the pin is glued in with epoxy. The connection is strong and practically invisible visually.

A wooden connector is a large-diameter dowel (twenty to twenty-five millimeters), eighty to one hundred millimeters long, glued into the ends. Less strong than metal, but more authentic for traditional interiors.

An alternative to connectors is a miter cut at a thirty-degree angle. Both ends are cut at an angle and glued end-to-end. A miter cut is stronger than a straight butt joint and less noticeable visually. However, it requires precise cutting — even the slightest gap ruins the appearance.

Flanges for vertical elements

When using round molding as decorative slats, posts, or columns, flanges are used — metal or plastic plates with holes for fasteners. The flange is placed over the end of the slat and attached to the wall, floor, or ceiling with screws or anchors.

For a diameter of fifty millimeters, flanges have an inner diameter of fifty-two to fifty-four millimeters (a small gap to compensate for tolerances). Flanges come in open (fasteners visible) and closed (fasteners hidden by a decorative cap) types.

Adjustable flanges allow compensation for floor or ceiling unevenness, enabling slats to be installed strictly vertically even with deviations in the base surface.

Care and operation: durability for decades

Round molding made of quality wood with proper coating lasts for decades but requires certain care.

Regular cleaning

Weekly dry wiping with a soft cloth removes dust and prevents its accumulation. Wet cleaning — once a month, with a well-wrung cloth, without excess water. For handrails that are frequently touched by hands, weekly wet wiping is recommended — fats and skin sweat accumulate on the surface, which over time can damage the coating.

Do not use abrasive cleaners, hard sponges, or aggressive chemicals. Mild soap or special wood care products are the maximum.

Recoating

Oil finish should be renewed every two to three years. Signs that renewal is needed: the surface has become matte, rough, or the wood appears dry in spots. Procedure: light sanding with P320 abrasive, dust removal, application of a fresh coat of oil.

Lacquer finish lasts longer, but if scratches or wear appear, it requires a complete renewal — removal of the old lacquer, sanding, application of a fresh coating. This is a labor-intensive procedure, especially for installed handrails. It's easier to dismantle the element, renew the coating in a workshop, and reinstall it.

Protection from mechanical damage

Avoid impacts with hard objects. A dent on a round molding is especially noticeable as it disrupts the perfect circular profile. When moving furniture or during work in the room, protect handrails and decorative elements with soft pads.

If damage does occur — a shallow dent can be steamed (damp cloth, hot iron), the wood swells, and the dent reduces or disappears. Deep dents and scratches require local restoration — wood filler, sanding, touch-up, local renewal of the coating.

Frequently asked questions

Can 50 mm round molding be used outdoors?

Yes, provided the correct wood species and coating are chosen. Oak or larch with a protective coating (yacht varnish or decking oil) can last outdoors for twenty to thirty years. Pine and beech are not recommended for exterior use.

What is the maximum length of round molding without joints?

Standard blank lengths are two, three, four meters. Some manufacturers offer blanks up to six meters (expensive, requires special logistics). Longer handrails are assembled from several sections using connectors.

How to choose wood species for a staircase handrail?

For a heavily used staircase in a house — oak or ash. For a staircase with low load (attic, basement) — beech or pine. For a child's room — a soft wood species (beech, pine) so a child is less likely to be injured if they fall.

How much does 50 mm round molding cost?

Pine: from 200 to 400 rubles per linear meter. Beech: from 450 to 700 rubles. Oak: from 700 to 1200 rubles. Ash: from 600 to 900 rubles. Price depends on wood grade, moisture content, processing quality, and presence of coating.

Can 50 mm round molding be bent to create curved elements?

Yes, some species (beech, ash, elm) can be bent without fiber breakage after steaming. The minimum bending radius for a fifty-millimeter diameter is about one meter. Oak bends less well, pine does not bend at all (it breaks).

How to attach round molding to a concrete wall?

Using brackets. The bracket is attached to the wall with dowels (for concrete — 6-8 mm nylon dowels), the handrail is placed into the bracket's recess and secured with a screw from below or snapped in (depends on the bracket type).

Do the ends of round molding need to be treated?

Yes, ends are most vulnerable to moisture penetration. Ends are sanded with P180-P240 abrasive and treated with the same coating as the main surface (oil or varnish). For exterior elements, additional treatment of ends with a special end-grain sealer is recommended.

Can 50 mm round molding be used for a bar counter?

Yes, as a footrest. A standard solution is a horizontal round rail at a height of three hundred to three hundred fifty millimeters from the floor, on which patrons rest their feet while sitting on bar stools. A fifty-millimeter diameter is comfortable for foot support.

How to join round molding at an angle?

For angled connections (e.g., on a staircase turn), special corner elements are used — factory-made or custom-made. An alternative is a miter cut at the required angle followed by gluing. Complex three-dimensional angles require professional cutting on a miter saw with a rotary table.

What tool is needed for cutting round molding?

Miter saw (circular saw with rotary table) for straight and angled cuts. A fine-toothed handsaw — for single cuts. Jigsaw — not recommended (cuts round profiles unevenly). Sander for finishing ends after cutting.

Conclusion

Round wooden baluster 50 mm— is more than just a standard size in the woodworking industry. It is a refined solution where ergonomics, aesthetics, technology, and economics converge. Fifty millimeters is the diameter that is comfortable for the hand, pleasing to the eye, rational in production, and versatile in application.

From staircase handrails, providing safety and support, to decorative battens creating visual texture in space. From wardrobe rods holding clothes, to kitchen rails organizing storage. From furniture elements to architectural accents — 50 mm diameter round molding finds application everywhere that requires a combination of strength, aesthetics, and tactile comfort.

Choosing the material means choosing the character of the product. Oak — for maximum strength and durability. Ash — for contrasting, expressive grain. Beech — for uniformity and ability to be stained. Pine — for economical projects. Each species has its niche, its optimal application.

The coating determines not only protection but also the character of interaction with the product. Oil creates a natural, tactilely pleasant surface. Varnish — maximum protection and durability. Wax — classic silkiness. The choice of coating depends on operating conditions, aesthetic preferences, and willingness for regular maintenance.

For over two decades, STAVROS company has specialized in the production of high-qualityTypes of wooden moldingswhich cover the entire spectrum of needs in modern construction and interior design. Round molding with a diameter of fifty millimeters is one of the key products in the STAVROS range, manufactured in various wood species and finishing options.

STAVROS production facilities include modern equipment from European manufacturers — four-sided planers with milling heads for forming round profiles, sanding lines for achieving perfect surface smoothness, chambers for applying protective coatings under controlled conditions.

Quality control at every stage of production guarantees that STAVROS round molding meets all requirements: geometric precision (diameter tolerance ±0.3 millimeters), wood moisture content in the optimal range (eight to twelve percent), absence of unacceptable defects, perfect surface smoothness.

In the STAVROS catalog, round molding with a diameter of fifty millimeters is available in several species: oak (natural and tinted in various shades), ash (natural and light), beech (natural, bleached, painted), pine (extra grade without knots). Blank lengths range from two to four meters, allowing selection of the optimal size for any project while minimizing the number of joints.

STAVROS offers round molding both without coating (for customer's own finishing) and with a ready-made coating — natural or tinted oil, matte or semi-matte varnish. The ready-made coating is applied under factory conditions, guaranteeing its quality, uniformity, and durability.

For professional customers — construction companies, interior designers, furniture manufacturers — STAVROS offers a flexible discount system, the possibility of manufacturing non-standard lengths and diameters (made-to-order), comprehensive supplies with other staircase and molding elements.

STAVROS logistics covers all of Russia. Own transport for Moscow and the Moscow region, partner transport companies for other regions. The packaging of round molding ensures protection against damage during transportation — shrink film, end protection, pallet stacking with fixation.

STAVROS consulting support helps customers make the right choice. Company specialists will answer questions about selecting wood species for specific applications, about fastening methods, about compatibility with other elements, about finishing options. STAVROS's goal is not just to sell a product, but to ensure the successful implementation of the customer's project.

Choosing STAVROS means choosing a manufacturer with a reputation, with experience, with an understanding that details determine the quality of the whole. STAVROS round molding means geometric precision, dimensional stability, material durability, the beauty of natural wood.

Create an interior where every detail contributes to overall harmony — withwooden interior decorfrom STAVROS.