The decorative and extremely hard wood of curly birch has been used for centuries by local craftsmen. In the Suomi pavilion at the Paris World Fair of 1900, Gallen-Kallela’s “Iris”-room with its visa furniture and other art treasures were a major attraction. Visa is both valued and valuable timber. Production of top-quality visa-timber requires expertise, and great attention to tree care and thinning.
These days commercial visa birch cultivars may well be micro-propagated but the seedling production was started with seeds from a tree still growing at Punkaharju, near Savonlinna. This was possible because visa formation had been noticed to be an inherited characteristic.