If you take a wet log and build a table immediately, you are building a ticking time bomb. As that water escapes into the room, the wood doesn't just shrink—it warps . It cups, twists, splits (checks), and cracks open like a dried riverbed.
This is the old way. Stack the lumber in a shed with stickers (small wooden strips) between each layer to let the air circulate. Then... you wait. For hardwoods like oak or walnut, the rule of thumb is brutal: one year per inch of thickness .
And that, in a world obsessed with speed, is the quiet luxury of waiting.