Cross Concho Conchos

Cross Concho Conchos

Hardwood terminology. Madera Floor, Fairfax, VA

  • Adhesive: A substance capable of holding materials together by attachment surface. It is a general term includes cement, mucilage, and paste and glue.
  • Anisotropic: Exhibiting different properties when measured along different axes. In general, fibrous materials such as wood are anisotropic.
  • Balanced Construction: Constructions such as forces induced by uniformly distributed changes in moisture content does not cause warping. Symmetrical construction plywood in which the grain of each layer is perpendicular to that of adjacent plies is balanced construction.
  • Bark pocket opening between annual growth rings that contains bark. Bark pockets appear as dark streaks on radial surfaces and as rounded areas on tangential surfaces.
  • Beam: A structural supporting a load applied transversely to it.
  • Piqué: Small areas localized in the wood with the fibers indented and otherwise contorted to form few to many small circular or elliptical figures remotely resembling birds' eyes tangential to the surface. Sometimes found in sugar maple and used for decorative purposes, rare in other hardwoods.
  • Blister: An elevation of the surface of an adherend, somewhat resembling in shape a blister on the human skin: its boundaries may be indefinitely exposed and it erupted in May and flatten. (A blister may be caused by insufficient adhesive; sufficient drying time, temperature or pressure or trapped water or solvent vapors.)
  • Board Foot: A unit of measurement of lumber represented by counsel 12 "long, 12 inches wide and 1 inch thick, or its cubic equivalent. In practice, the calculation of board feet of wood 1 inch thick or more is based on its nominal thickness and width and the actual length. Timber with a nominal thickness of less than 1 inch is calculated as 1 inch
  • Bond: (1) The union of materials by adhesives. (2) To assemble the materials using an adhesive.
  • Adherence: The unit load applied in tension, compression, flexural, impact Peel, cleavage or shear required to break an adhesive assembly, rupture occurring at or near the plane of the bond.
  • Bow: The distortion of timber in which there is a deviation in a direction perpendicular to the flat face, a straight line from end-to-end part.
  • Case Width: A built-up beam with solid wood flanges and plywood or layer-based wood panel product.
  • Boxed Heart: The term used when the pith falls entirely within the four sides of a piece of wood throughout its length. Also called pith box.
  • Burl: (1) A hard, woody outgrowth on a tree, more or less rounded in shape, resulting usually entwined growth of a cluster of adventitious buds. These lenses are the source of the highly figured Burl veneers used for purely ornamentals. (2) In lumber or veneer, a localized severe distortion of the grain generally rounded in outline, usually resulting induced through dead branch stubs, varying from one to several centimeters (a half to several centimeters) in diameter, often include one or more groups of several small contiguous conical protuberances, each usually having a core, or pith but no appreciable amount of end grain _en tangential view) surrounding it.
  • Cambium: A thin layer of tissue between bark and wood that repeatedly subdivides to form new wood and bark cells.
  • Cannot: A newspaper that has been Slabbed on one or more sides. Ordinarily, cants are intended for splitting at right angles to their most wide sawn face. The term is poorly used. (See Flitch)
  • Carburizing: A state of stress and to dry wood characterized by constraints compression in the outer layers and tensile stresses in the center or nucleus.
  • Cell: A general term for units anatomical tissue plants, including wood fibers, vessel members, and other elements of diverse structure and function.
  • Cellulose: Carbohydrate is the main constituent of wood and is part of the wood cells.
  • Check: A lengthwise separation of the forest which usually extends through the annual growth rings and often leads to constraints established in wood during seasoning.
  • Cohesion: The state in which the constituents of a mass of material are held together by chemical and physical forces.
  • Compression error: The deformation of wood fibers resulting from excessive compression along the grain either by direct end compression or bending. It may develop in standing trees bending by wind or snow or to internal stresses developed longitudinal growth, or it may result from constraints imposed after the tree is cut. On the surface of lumber, compression failures may appear as wrinkles on the face of the coin.
  • Corbel: A projection the face of a wall or column supporting a weight.
  • Crook: The distortion of lumber in which there is a gap in a direction perpendicular the edge of a straight line from end-to-end part.
  • Decay: Decomposition of wood substance by fungi.
    Advanced (typical) Decay: The earlier stage of decay in which destruction is readily recognized because the wood has become punky, soft and spongy, stringy, ringshaked, pitted or crumbly. Decided discoloration or bleaching of the rotted wood is often apparent.
  • Brown rot: wood, any decay in which the attack concentrates on the carbohydrates cellulose and associates, rather than the lignin, producing a light in the darkness Brown friable residue - hence vaguely called "dry rot." An advanced stage when the timber is divided by rectangular plans and diminishing is called "cubical rot."
  • Dry Rot: A term loosely applied to any dry, crumbly rot but especially to one who, when is at an advanced stage, allows the wood to be crushed easily to a dry powder. The term is actually a misnomer for any decay since all fungi require considerable moisture for growth.
  • Incipient Decay: The first stage of decomposition that has not progressed far enough to soften or otherwise alter significantly the hardness of the wood. It is usually accompanied by a slight discoloration or bleaching.
  • Heart Rot: A feature to limit the decay of wood heart. It typically arises in the living tree.
  • Pocket Decay: decomposed which appears as a hole or pocket, usually surrounded by a wooden appearance.
  • Soft Rot: A particular type of decay developing under very wet (as in cooling towers and boat timbers) in the outer layers of wood caused by the destruction of cellulose microfungi that attack the secondary cell walls and not the intercellular layer.
  • Rot White: wood, any decay or rot attacking both the cellulose and lignin, producing a generally whitish residue may be spongy or stringy rot, or occur as pocket rot.
  • Delamination: The separation of layers of wood or plywood laminate due to the failure of the adhesive, either within the adhesive itself or at the interface between the adhesive and substrate.
  • Density: As usually applied to wood of normal cellular form, density is mass per unit volume of timber enclosed within the surfaces of a wood-plus-empty complex. It is variously expressed in pounds per cubic foot, kilograms per cubic meter, or grams per centimeter cube at a specified moisture content.
  • Dewpoint: The temperature at which a vapor begins to deposit liquid form. Is particularly true for water in the atmosphere.
  • Early Wood: The portion of the growth ring formed during the first part the growing season. It is generally less dense and weaker mechanically than latewood. Also called Springwood.
  • Equilibrium moisture content: The moisture content when timber gains nor loses moisture when surrounded by air at a given relative humidity and temperature.
  • Fiber Saturation Point: The step of drying or wetting wood at which the cell walls are saturated and cell cavities free from water. It applies to an individual cell or group of cells, not all councils. It is usually taken as about 30% moisture based on oven-dry weight.
  • Figure: The pattern produced in a wood surface by annual growth rings, rays, knots, deviations from regular grain such as interlocked and wavy, and irregular coloration.
  • Filler: In work wood, a substance used to fill the holes and irregularities in planed or sanded surfaces to decrease the porosity of the surface before applying refinish coatings. As applied to adhesives, relatively non-adhesive substance added to an adhesive to improve its properties work force or other qualities.
  • Finish (finish): Product (1) wood such as doors, staircases, and other fine work required fill a building, especially inside. (2) coating of paint, varnish, lacquer, wax or similar material applied to wood surfaces to protect and improve their strength or appearance.
  • Glue: Originally, a hard gelatin obtained from hides, tendons, cartilage, bone, etc., of animals. In addition, an adhesive prepared from this substance by heating the water. Through general use, the term is now synonymous with the term "adhesive".
  • Grade: The description of the quality of a piece made of wood or logs.
  • Grain: The direction, size, layout, appearance, or quality of wood fiber or timber. To get a specific sense of the term must be qualified.
  • Large-grained (Fine-Grained) Wood: Wood with narrow, discrete annual rings. The term is sometimes used to designate wood having small and closely spaced pores, but in this sense, the term "fine textured" is more often used.
  • Coarse-Grained Wood: Wood with wide annual rings visible in which there is a considerable difference between the early wood and latewood. The term is sometimes used to designate wood with large pores such as oak, keruing, meranti, and walnut, but in this sense, the term "open-grain" is often used.
  • Surly Wood: The timber in which the fibers deviate from a line parallel to another part. Cross grain may either be in diagonal or spiral grain or a combination of both.
  • Curly-Grained Wood: The timber in which the fibers are distorted so that they look curly, as in "pique" the wood. The areas showing curly grain may vary up to several centimeters in diameter.
  • Diagonal-Grained Wood: The wood in which annual cycles are at an angle with the axis of a piece after cutting at an angle with the bark of the tree or log. A form of grain-cons.
  • Edge-Grained Lumber: Lumber that has been sawed so that major surfaces extend substantially at right angles to the rings of annual growth. Lumber is considered grain peak when the rings form an angle of 45 ° to 90 ° with the vast surface of the part.
  • End-Grained Wood: The grain as seen on a cut at right angles to the direction of fibers (eg a cross section of a tree).
  • Fiddleback-Grained Wood: figure produced by a type of fine wavy grain found, for example, in species such as maple, wood is traditionally used for the backs of violins.
  • Slab (flat-sawn) softwood lumber which has been sawed parallel to the pith and approximately tangent to the growth rings. Lumber is considered flat when grain growth annual rings form an angle less than 45 ° with the surface of the part.
  • Interlocked-Grained Wood: Grain in which the fibers used for several years in May slope in a right-handed direction, then for a number of years, the slope of the back of the left hand direction, and later changes to a right-handed pitch, and so on. This wood is extremely difficult to separate radially, but tangentially May split fairly easily.
  • Open-Grained Wood: Common classification for woods with large pores such as oak, keruing, meranti, and walnut. Also known as "coarse."
  • Plainsawn Lumber: Another term for the wooden slab.
  • Quartersawn Lumber: Another term for Edge-wood grained.
  • Side-Grained Wood: Another term for the wooden slab.
  • Slash-Grained Wood: Another term for limber slab.
  • Spiral-Grained Wood: The wood in which the fibers take a spiral course around the trunk of a tree, instead of the normal vertical course. The spiral in May handed in a lie or left-handed direction around the tree trunk. Spiral grain is a form of cross grain.
  • Right over wood: The wood in which the fibers are parallel to the axis a room.
  • Vertical-Grained Lumber: Another term for the portion of wood grained.
  • Wavy-Grained Wood: Wood in which the fibers collectively take the form of waves or ripples.
  • Green: Freshly sawn wood or unseasoned. Wood has become completely Wet after immersion in water would not be considered green but may be said in the statement "green."
  • Growth ring: Layer of wood growth put on a tree during a single growing season. In the temperate zone, the annual growth rings of many species (for example, oaks and pines) are easily distinguished because of differences in the cells formed during the first parts and the end of the season. In some species temperate zone (black gum and sweet gum) and many tropical species, the annual growth rings are not easy to recognize.
  • Hardness: A property of wood that allows it to resist indentation.
  • Hardwoods: Generally, a botanical groups trees that have vessels or pores and broad leaves, in contrast to conifer or softwoods. The term does not refer to the actual hardness forest.
  • Heartwood: The wood extending from the pith to the sapwood, the cells that greater participation in the life of the tree. Wood May contain phenolic compounds, gums, resins and other materials that are generally darker and more decay resistant than sapwood.
  • Isotropic: Exhibiting the same properties in all directions.
  • Commons: junction of two pieces of wood or veneer.
  • Glue joint: The place where two adherends are held together by a layer of glue.
  • After Mixed: A common end formed squares abutting the ends of two pieces.
  • Edge Joint: A joint made by bonding two pieces of wood edge to edge, usually bonding. The joints may be made by gluing two edges square as a plain edge joint or by using machined joints of various types, such as tongued-and-grooved joints.
  • End Joint: A joint made by bonding two pieces of wood end to end, usually the corresponding end.
  • Articulation finger: An end joint made up of several meshing wedges or fingers of wood bonded with an adhesive. Fingers are sloped and may be cut parallel either wide or narrow side of the coin.
  • Joist: One of a series of parallel beams used to support floor and ceiling loads and supported in turn by larger beams, girders, or bearing walls.
  • Kiln: A chamber control air flow, temperature and relative humidity for drying lumber. The temperature is increased as drying progresses, and the relative humidity is diminished.
  • Knot: Part of a branch or limb that has been surrounded by subsequent growth of the stem. The shape of the node, it appears on a cut surface depends on the angle of cutting relative to the longitudinal axis of the node.
  • Encased Knot: A knot whose rings of annual growth are not inter-grown with those of the surrounding woods.
  • Inter-grown Knot: A knot whose rings of annual growth are totally inter-grown with those of the surrounding woods.
  • Loose Knot: A knot that is not held firmly in place by growth or position and can not be invoked to stay in place.
  • Pine Knot: A knot that is not more than 12mm (1 / 2 inches) in diameter.
  • Sound Knot: A knot that is solid across its face, at least as hard as the surrounding wood and shows no signs of decay.
  • Spike Knot: A knot cut approximately parallel to the longitudinal axis so that the exposed portion is much longer.
  • Laminate: A product made by bonding two or more layers (plates), equipment or materials.
    Laminated timber: an assembly formed by bonding layers of veneer or wood with an adhesive so the grain of all plates is essentially parallel.
  • Latewood: The portion of the growth ring is formed in the early after wood formation has ceased. It is generally denser and more durable than wood early. (Also known as the summer wood.)
  • Lumber: The product of the sawmill and land for which manufacturing is limited to sawing, cutting, passing lengthwise through a standard machine planning, transverse to the length, and matching. Lumber may be manufactured from either softwood or hardwood. (See also Lumber: Dimension.)
  • Tip: Lumber that is less than 38 mm standard (2 in. nominal) and greater thickness standard 38 mm (2 in. nominal) in width. Boards under Standard 140 mm (6 in. nominal) wide stripes are sometimes called.
  • Dimension: Building a standard thickness of 38 mm (2 in. nominal) to the exclusion of Standard 114 mm (2 in. nominal).
  • Dressed Size: The size of timber to work after being coated with a machine planning. The dressed size is usually ½ to ¾ inch below the nominal or rough size. A 2-by-4 inches Goujon, for example, conservation measures about 1 ½ by 3 ½ "(Standard 38 by 89 mm).
  • Factory and Joinery: Timber to be cut for use in further manufacture. It is ranked on the percentage area that will produce a limited number of cuttings of a specified minimum size and quality.
  • Matched Lumber: Lumber edge dressed and shaped to form a close-tongued and grooved-joint on the edges or ends when laid edge to edge or end to end.
  • Nominal Size: As applied to wood or wood, the size in which it is known and sold on the market (often differs from actual size).
  • Patterned lumber: lumber, which is shaped to a pattern or molded form in addition to being dressed, matched or shiplapped, or any combination of these workings.
  • Rough Lumber: Lumber that has not been dressed (surfaced) but has been sawed, edged and trimmed.
  • Surfaced Lumber: Lumber that is dressed by running it through a planer.
  • Lumber: Lumber that is standard 114 mm (nominal 5 in.) or more in at least size. Timbers may be used as beams, sleepers, posts, caps, thresholds, beams or purlins.
  • Sealant: a material with adhesive properties, generally used in relatively thick sections that can be easily applied by extrusion, trowel or spatula. (See Adhesive.)
  • Millwork: Wood planed and reasons for work in the building, including items such as sash, doors, cornices, panelwork, and other elements of interior or exterior trim. Is this not including floors, ceilings or siding.
  • Mineral Streak: A color-olive green to black or brown discoloration of undetermined cause in hardwoods.
  • Moisture Content: The amount of water contained in the wood, usually expressed as a percentage of the weight of wood ovendry.
  • Molding: A strip of wood with a curved or projecting surface used for decorative purposes.
  • Mortise: A slot in a board, plank or timber to form a joint.
  • Naval Stores: A term applied to oils, resins, tars, and land from the oleoresin contained in secreted by or extracted from trees, mainly pines (Pinus genus). Historically, these were important items in the stores of wooden ships sailing.
  • Old Growth: Timber in or from a mature, natural forest established. When trees have grown during most if not all of their individual lives in active competition with their companions for sunlight and moisture, This wood is generally straight and relatively free of knots.
  • Ovendry Wood: dried at a relatively constant weight in a ventilated oven at 102 ° C to 105 ° C (215 ° F to 220 ° F).
  • Parenchyma: short cells with simple pits and operating mainly in the metabolism and storage of raw vegetable food. They stay alive longer than tracheids, fibers and vessels, sometimes for many years. Two types of parenchyma cells are recognized - those son of vertical, more specifically known as axial parenchyma, and those series in the horizontal rays, known as ray parenchyma.
  • Pile: A long, heavy timber, round or square, is sunk deep into the soil to provide a solid foundation for the structures built on soft, wet or submerged sites (for example, landing phases or bridge abutments).
  • Pitch Pocket: An opening extending parallel to the annual growth rings and containing or having contained, pitch, either solid or liquid.
  • Pattern Pitch: An accumulation of clear height of more or less regular streaks in the wood of certain conifers.
  • Pith: The small soft core occurring near the center a tree trunk, branch, twig or log.
  • Plank: Large thick board laid with its horizontal dimension and are useful as running surface.
  • Plywood: A panel consisting of wood glued relatively thin layers of veneer with the grain of adjacent layers to right angles or veneer in combination with a core of wood or reconstituted wood. The usual constructions have an odd number of layers.
  • Psychrometer: An instrument for measuring the amount of water vapor in the atmosphere. It has both a dry bulb and wet bulb thermometer. The bulb the wet bulb thermometer is kept wet and is cooled by evaporation at a temperature lower than indicated by the thermometer dry bulb. Because evaporation is greater in dry air, the difference between the two thermometer readings will be greater when the air is dry when it is wet.
  • Radial: coinciding with a radius of the axis of the tree or log to the circumference. A radial section is a longitudinal section in a plane passing through the axis of the tree trunk.
  • Raised grain: a state of surface roughness of wood clad in which the hard latewood is raised above the softer earlywood but not detached from it.
  • Rays, wood pieces of cells extending radially in a tree and height from a few cells of some species to 4 inches or more in oak. The rays serve primarily to store food and transport horizontally in the tree. On Quartersawn oak, the rays form a conspicuous figure, sometimes called spots.
  • Humidity: relationship between the amount of water vapor in the air that the air would hold at saturation at the same temperature. It is generally considered based on the weight of steam, but for accuracy, should be considered on the basis of vapor pressures.
  • Resin: (1) Solid, semisolid, or solid resin nickname - an organic material that tends to flow when subjected to stress, usually has a softening or melting, and fractures usually Concho Dally. (2) Resin Liquid - A liquid organic polymers which, when converted to its state final use, is a resin.
  • Resin ducts: Intercellular passages that contain materials and to provide lumber. On a cut surface, they are generally invisible. They may extend vertically parallel to the shaft axis or perpendicular to axis and parallel rays.
  • Ring failure: the separation of the wood during the seasoning, occurring along the grain and parallel to growth rings. (See Shake.)
  • Ring-Porous Woods: A group of hardwoods in which the pores are relatively large at the beginning of each annual ring and decrease size more or less abruptly toward the outside of the ring, forming a distinct inner zone of pores, known as the timber at the beginning, and an outer zone with smaller pores, known as the latewood.
  • Rip: To cut lengthwise parallel to the grain.
  • Sapwood: The wood of pale color near from outside the newspaper. In most conditions, sapwood is more susceptible to heart rot.
  • Saw Kerf: (1) grooves or notches made in cutting with a saw. (2) Part of a newspaper, wood, or other piece of wood removed by the saw in parting the material into two pieces.
  • Seasoning: Removing moisture from green wood to improve its serviceability.
  • Air Dried: Dried by exposure to air in a yard or shed without artificial heat.
  • Dried in oven dried in an oven to use of artificial heat.
  • Second growth: the woods that grew after the move, either by cutting, fire, wind, or any other body, any or most of the previous position.
  • Shake: A separation along the grain, most of which occurs between rings of annual growth. Widely regarded as having occurred in the standing tree or during felling.
  • Softwoods: Generally, a botanical groups of trees which have no ships and in most cases have needlelike or scale like leaves, conifers, also the wood produced by such trees. The term does not refer to the actual hardness of the forest.
  • Stain: A discoloration in wood that may be caused by organisms as diverse as micro-organisms, metal, or chemicals. The term also applies materials used to impart color to wood.
  • Dosage: (1) The ability of a member to maintain stress without failure. (2) In a specific test mode, the maximum stress sustained by a member loaded to failure.
  • Raito Force: The hypothetical ratio of the strength of a element of structure to what it would if it contained no reducing resistance characteristics (such as knots, slope of grain, shake).
  • Structural Timbers: pieces of wood of relatively large size, strength or stiffness is the control element in their selection and their use. Examples of timber wood trestle (stringers, caps, posts, supports, bracing, bridge ties, guardrails); timber car (frame car, including senior management, car sills); framing for building (posts, sills, beams), timber (lumber boat, boat deck), and against weapons to the Poles.
  • Substrate: A material on the surface of a substance containing adhesive spreads for all purposes, such as bonding or coating.
  • Tack: The property of an adhesive that allows it to form a liaison measurable strength immediately after adhesive and adherend are brought into contact under low pressure.
  • Texture: A term often used so interchangeably with grain. Sometimes used to combine the concepts of density and degree of contrast between earlywood and latewood. In this manual, texture refers to the fine structure of wood (see Grain) rather than the annual rings.
  • Wood, Round: Wood used in the original round shape, such as poles, pilings, posts and mine timbers.
  • Timber Stand: Timber still on the stump.
  • Trim: The finish materials in a building, such as moldings, applied around openings (window trim, door trim) or on the floor and the ceiling of Room (plinths, cornices, moldings and others).
  • Twist: A distortion caused by the turning or winding of the edges of a board so that the four corners of a face are more in the same plane.
  • Vapor retarder: A material with a high resistance to vapor movement, such as paper, plastic film or of specially coated paper that is used in combination with insulation to control condensation.
  • Veneer: A thin layer or sheet of wood.
    Rotary-cut veneer: veneer on a lathe which rotates a log or bolt, thrown into the center, against a knife.
  • Sawn Veneer: Veneer produced by sawing.
  • Sliced veneer which is cut a log, bolt, or flitch with a knife.
  • Virgin growth: The growth of mature trees in the forest of origin.
  • Wane: Bark or wood without any cause on edge or corner of a part except eased edges.
  • Warp: Any variation of a true or plane surface. Warp includes bow, crook, cup and twist, or any combination thereof.
  • Waterproof: A liquid that penetrates wood which retards significantly changing the moisture content and dimensions dried wood without affecting adversely its desirable properties.
  • Water repellent: a repellent that contains a preservative that after application to wood and drying, accomplishes the dual purpose of conferring resistance to attack by fungi or insects and also retards the development humidity levels.
  • Weather: The mechanical or chemical disintegration and discoloration of the wood surface caused by exposure to light, the action of dust and sand carried by winds, and the alternate shrinking and swelling of the surface fibers with continuous variation of moisture content brought by changes in weather. If time does not decay.

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1 1 4 INCH SILVER GOLD HORSEHEAD CONCHOS CHICAGO SCREW NEW BELT BRIDLE
Paypal   US $5.99
1 1 4 INCH SILVER WITH GOLD HORSESHOE CONCHOS CHICAGO SCREW NEW BELT BRIDLE
1 1 4 INCH SILVER WITH GOLD HORSESHOE CONCHOS CHICAGO SCREW NEW BELT BRIDLE
Paypal   US $5.99
1 1 4 INCH SILVER GOLD BULLRIDER CONCHOS CHICAGO SCREW NEW BELT BRIDLE
1 1 4 INCH SILVER GOLD BULLRIDER CONCHOS CHICAGO SCREW NEW BELT BRIDLE
Paypal   US $5.99
Barrel Racing Saddle Cross Leather Silver Concho with silver embellishments
Barrel Racing Saddle Cross Leather Silver Concho with silver embellishments
Paypal   US $16.00
Cheetah Bling Belt Headstall
Cheetah Bling Belt Headstall
Paypal   US $40.00
Showman Leather w Silver Spur Rowel Trim Cowboy Cross Horse Tack Equine
Showman Leather w Silver Spur Rowel Trim Cowboy Cross Horse Tack Equine
Paypal   US $9.99
Leather w Silver Celtic Cross Cowboy Cross Horse Tack
Leather w Silver Celtic Cross Cowboy Cross Horse Tack
Paypal   US $9.99
Leather w Silver Rider Cowboy Cross Horse Tack
Leather w Silver Rider Cowboy Cross Horse Tack
Paypal   US $13.00
Leather with Silver Concho Cowboy Cross Horse Tack
Leather with Silver Concho Cowboy Cross Horse Tack
Paypal   US $13.00
Leather with 3 Cross Concho Cowboy Cross Horse Tack
Leather with 3 Cross Concho Cowboy Cross Horse Tack
Paypal   US $13.00
Used 16 1 2 Ranch Roping Saddle by Bar B Saddlery Terrell TX
Used 16 1 2 Ranch Roping Saddle by Bar B Saddlery Terrell TX
Paypal   US $1,850.00
SHOWMAN Cross ALLIGATOR Print Bridle Breast Collar
SHOWMAN Cross ALLIGATOR Print Bridle Breast Collar
Paypal   US $55.00
SHOWMAN Rawhide Futurity CROSS Bridle Breast Collar DK
SHOWMAN Rawhide Futurity CROSS Bridle Breast Collar DK
Paypal   US $48.85
SHOWMAN Rawhide CROSS Concho Bridle Breast Collar Light
SHOWMAN Rawhide CROSS Concho Bridle Breast Collar Light
Paypal   US $49.99
SHOWMAN Rawhide CROSS Concho Bridle Breast Collar Burg
SHOWMAN Rawhide CROSS Concho Bridle Breast Collar Burg
Paypal   US $49.99
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BRIDLE BREAST COLLAR WESTERN LEATHER HEADSTALL TAN LEATHER WITH LIGHT PINK CROSS INLAY AND PINK CONCHOS BRIDLE BREAST COLLAR WESTERN LEATHER HEADSTALL TAN LEATHER WITH LIGHT PINK CROSS INLAY AND PINK CONCHOS
Sale Price: $124.99

Tack Market. Top Brand and Quality products at rock bottom prices. Western Headstall / Bridle AND Breast collar set whole set includes bridle and breast strap Horse Size. This is an excellent quality high end product, picture tell for itself...

Tooled Leather Wide Cheek Bridle & Reins with Cross Conchos Tooled Leather Wide Cheek Bridle & Reins with Cross Conchos
Sale Price: $45.00

Horse size fancy tooled leather bridle

4 SILVER CROSS CRYSTALS BERRY CONCHOS 4 SILVER CROSS CRYSTALS BERRY CONCHOS
Sale Price: $22.99

Tack Market. Top Brand and Quality products at rock bottom prices. This is an excellent quality high end product, picture tell for itself. We give 100% satisfaction Guarantee.

BRIDLE BREAST COLLAR WESTERN LEATHER HEADSTALL WITH DARK TAN LEATHER AND YELLOW-GREEN INLAY WITH GREEN CROSS CONCHOS BRIDLE BREAST COLLAR WESTERN LEATHER HEADSTALL WITH DARK TAN LEATHER AND YELLOW-GREEN INLAY WITH GREEN CROSS CONCHOS
Sale Price: $124.99

Tack Market. Top Brand and Quality products at rock bottom prices. Western Headstall / Bridle AND Breast collar set whole set includes bridle and breast strap Horse Size. This is an excellent quality high end product, picture tell for itself...

ELECTRA CROSS BROWN CONCHO ELECTRA CROSS BROWN CONCHO
Sale Price: $13.99

BRIDLE BREAST COLLAR WESTERN LEATHER HEADSTALL TAN LEATHER WITH PURPLE INLAY AND CROSS CONCHOS BRIDLE BREAST COLLAR WESTERN LEATHER HEADSTALL TAN LEATHER WITH PURPLE INLAY AND CROSS CONCHOS
Sale Price: $124.99

Tack Market. Top Brand and Quality products at rock bottom prices. Western Headstall / Bridle AND Breast collar set whole set includes bridle and breast strap Horse Size. This is an excellent quality high end product, picture tell for itself...

Bridle Headstall Breast collar Set with Dark Tan Leather with Black Inlay and Blue Cross Conchos Bridle Headstall Breast collar Set with Dark Tan Leather with Black Inlay and Blue Cross Conchos
Sale Price: $129.99

Tack Market. Top Brand and Quality products at rock bottom prices. Western Headstall / Bridle AND Breast collar set whole set includes bridle and breast strap Horse Size. This is an excellent quality high end product, picture tell for itself...

ELECTRA BLACK CROSS STITCHED WITH CONCHOS ELECTRA BLACK CROSS STITCHED WITH CONCHOS
Sale Price: $14.99

Metalab Black Satin Floral Cross Concho Spurs Metalab Black Satin Floral Cross Concho Spurs
List Price: $61.99
Sale Price: $59.10

1 1/4" Band And 2-1/4" Shank, 8-Point Rowel (Strong Effect)

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