towering Federal-period townhouses and sleek contemporary build-outs where Black Limba's golden brown heartwood meets centuries of architectural ambition head-on. In Boston's Back Bay and Beacon Hill, where natural light filters through narrow streetscapes and shifts dramatically across seasons, those grey to nearly black streaks and veins become active participants in the interior atmosphere—darkening with age in a way that mirrors the patina of the city's own brownstone facades. Rosebud sources Black Limba panels with figuring dense enough to hold visual weight against Boston's characteristically bold millwork profiles, where the veneer must command attention across formal dining rooms and law office lobbies alike. As the species travels inland from the coast and climbs toward the mountain communities near Boulder, its dialogue with light transforms yet again—trading Boston's tempered urban glow for something altogether more expansive and