What Is Valchromat? The Coloured-Through Wood, Explained
Valchromat is a premium coloured-through wood panel: an engineered board where every wood fibre is dyed with organic pigment, so the colour is solid from face to core. People often assume it is just coloured MDF, but in feel and quality it is a different material altogether. It is denser and around 30% stronger, with a deep, velvety matte surface, rich saturated colour that does not chip or fade, and clean coloured edges that need no veneer, paint, or plastic banding. That is why designers, architects, and furniture makers reach for it when they want colour that looks and feels genuinely luxurious. Below is what it is, how it truly differs from MDF, how long it lasts, and how to care for it.
What is Valchromat exactly?
Valchromat is a coloured-through wood panel made by the Portuguese manufacturer Investwood. Natural wood fibres are dyed individually with organic pigment, then bonded under high heat and pressure into a dense, homogeneous board with colour running all the way through. The result behaves less like a cheap sheet good and more like a coloured solid material you can shape and put on show.
That is the part people fall for: when you cut, rout, or chamfer a Valchromat panel, the exposed edge is the same rich colour as the face. There is no pale core hiding under a coloured skin, and no plastic edge banding to peel away later. A maker can leave edges raw and tactile, shape soft details, and let the saturated colour and velvety matte surface carry the piece, which is impossible with painted or laminated boards.
A sculptural square frame in solid-colour Valchromat, so even the cut edges carry the shade.
How is Valchromat different from MDF?
This is the question everyone asks, and the honest answer is that the two are not really in the same class. Standard MDF is a budget building board: a grey-brown core that only looks finished once it is painted, veneered, or wrapped in laminate, and the moment it chips or scratches, the dull core shows through. Valchromat is a finished material in its own right. The colour is intrinsic, the board is denser and stronger, the surface has a deep matte, almost suede-like quality, and the coloured edges are a design feature rather than something to hide. One is a substrate you cover up; the other is a material you put on display. Here is the side by side.
| Property | Standard MDF | Valchromat |
|---|---|---|
| Colour | Surface paint or laminate only | Dyed through the whole board |
| Density | Around 700 kg/m³ | Around 830 kg/m³ |
| Strength | Baseline | Roughly 30% stronger |
| Scratches and chips | Expose the pale core | Same colour underneath, far less visible |
| Moisture | Low resistance | Moisture resistant (indoor) |
| Exposed edges | Need edge banding or paint | Can be left raw and coloured |
| Surface and feel | Flat, needs covering to finish | Deep matte, velvety, tactile |
| Typical use | Hidden carcasses, painted panels | Design furniture and interiors, on show |
Is Valchromat strong and durable?
Yes. With a density of around 830 kg/m³, Valchromat is denser and about 30% stronger than standard MDF, and it is more homogeneous through its thickness. That matters for furniture that has to carry weight: shelves stay flatter under load, panels resist sagging, and fixings hold well because there is more material packed into the board.
The colour-through trait is also a durability feature in daily use. On painted furniture, the first knock on a corner leaves a pale mark that catches the eye. On Valchromat the colour beneath is the same as the colour on top, so everyday scuffs are far less noticeable and the piece keeps looking intentional for longer. The organic dyes are also formulated to resist fading from normal indoor and artificial light.
A space-saving wall cabinet in solid-colour Valchromat, built to carry real weight in a small home.
Is Valchromat water resistant?
Valchromat is moisture resistant, which is one of its advantages over standard MDF, and it is classed for use as a load-bearing panel in humid indoor environments. That makes it well suited to rooms like kitchens, bathrooms, and hallways where ordinary MDF would struggle with damp air.
Moisture resistant is not the same as waterproof, though. Valchromat is an indoor material and should not sit in standing water or take constant direct wetting. For any spot near water, a surface finish such as a hard wax oil or varnish is recommended, both to protect the board and to make it easier to wipe clean. Used indoors and sealed, it copes happily with everyday life.
How do you care for Valchromat furniture?
Care is simple. For day-to-day cleaning, wipe the surface with a soft, slightly damp cloth to lift dust and marks, and avoid harsh or abrasive cleaning products that can dull the finish. Because the colour runs through the board, light surface scratches are easy to live with and often barely register.
Most Valchromat furniture is given a protective finish. At Quirky Moose we finish our pieces with a hard wax oil, which deepens the colour, protects the surface, and can be refreshed over time. If a finished piece ever looks tired after years of use, a light re-oiling brings it back rather than calling for a full repaint, which is the usual fate of painted MDF.
A solid-colour Valchromat seat on a birch frame, finished with hard wax oil. The simplest way to live with the material.
Why we build with Valchromat
We wanted to make furniture that is genuinely colourful without the colour being a thin, fragile layer that wears off. Valchromat lets us do that. It gives our pieces deep, solid colour that survives daily life, the strength to work as wall-mounted storage in small homes, and clean coloured edges that suit a Scandinavian, detail-led look. It is also a responsible choice: the boards are made from forest-thinning wood fibres and use non-toxic, organic dyes. Every piece is designed and made in Copenhagen and finished by hand. If you are weighing it up for a small space, our guide to small-space storage and furniture is a good next step.
Frequently asked questions
What is Valchromat made of?
Valchromat is made of wood fibres, usually from pine forest thinnings, bonded with resin under heat and pressure, with organic dye added to every fibre before pressing. That is what gives it solid colour all the way through the board instead of just on the surface.
Is Valchromat better than MDF?
For furniture you actually see, they are not really comparable. Valchromat is denser, about 30% stronger, and more moisture resistant than standard MDF, its colour runs through the whole board so chips and scratches barely show, and its deep matte surface looks and feels premium. Standard MDF is a cheaper substrate that is fine when it will be hidden, painted, or laminated, but it cannot match Valchromat for solid colour, finish quality, or durability.
Is Valchromat waterproof?
No. Valchromat is moisture resistant and handles humid indoor rooms well, but it is not waterproof and should not sit in standing water or be used outdoors. A hard wax oil or varnish finish adds protection and makes it easy to wipe clean.
Does Valchromat colour fade over time?
The organic dyes are made to resist fading under normal indoor and artificial light, so Valchromat furniture keeps its colour well. As with most materials, avoid prolonged harsh direct sunlight, and a protective finish helps preserve the shade.
How do you clean Valchromat?
Wipe it with a soft, slightly damp cloth and avoid aggressive or abrasive cleaners. Because the colour is through the board, small scratches are easy to live with, and a finished piece can be re-oiled to refresh it rather than repainted.
Colour that goes all the way through
Wall cabinets, display shelves, and stools in solid-colour Valchromat, made in Copenhagen for small homes.
Shop the Valchromat collection →Solid oak and Valchromat® , designed and made in Denmark.