On our midwest farm, in the 80s, maple was quite popular and we had a lot of logging done at that time. Maple, red oak, and walnut, primarily. The logging was done mostly as an income producer for my grandfather and he worked out a deal with an outfit that produced verneer and were/are a lumber company as well. Worked out great for all parties and the tree tops and bases they did not use, were used for firewood (oak and walnut, not the maple).
I've helped cut and split a lot of walnut to be chunked into a fireplace over the years. Some of them beautiful burl pieces. I tried to save those back and have my father advertise them to local artists at the time, to no avail.
We did retain some of the lumber cut off our place, and it is still stacked in the barn covered by a tarp. When a new gun stock is needed, the pile gets raided for the right piece. Nothing fancy, just straight grained, plain ol' walnut. But they do hold a special place for me.
One in particular was a stock made from a red elm tree that was standing at the house site where my grandfather was born. It was used to restock a single shot .22 belonging to my great grandfather, which had been a Christmas present. My grandfather was there that day and fired the first shot from the new .22, and it road behind his pickup seat for decades. Looked like it had also. That red elm was a real pain to work with according to the gunsmith that hewed it out for us and it is far from a show piece, but just the fact of what it is and what it represents makes it worth it.
Bottom line, find someone local who deals in the markets you are thinking and pick their brain. That's probably the best way to maximize what you are wanting out of the standing timber you have on your place.