Nashville absorbs Black Limba's golden brown heartwood and amplifies it, pairing those grey-to-black streaks with interiors that treat boldness not as excess but as identity — recording studios, boutique hotels along Lower Broadway, residential builds in the Gulch where every surface must carry emotional weight without apology. Here the darker figured wood finds its truest audience, because Nashville's design culture understands that drama and warmth are not opposites but partners, and the veining that runs through each sheet becomes a kind of visual rhythm the city already knows how to read. Rosebud ships these flitches from Louisville with the same exacting consistency whether they're destined for a songwriter's private den or a flagship retail concept on 12th Avenue South. And as those same sheets travel further south toward the quieter residential craft taking hold in New Albany, they will prove that Black Limba's character doesn't diminish with distance — it simply finds a different register.