I love Stiga's wood blades. My favorite is the Clipper. My favorite blades are actually Stiga blades. The reason I suggested the Butterfly ones for you, is you are coming from something very fast and the only Carbon blades that are really actually good, in my opinion, are the Butterfly technology blades where they combine Carbon for speed with something else to make the blade also have a soft slow element for when you do not hit as hard, short game touch stuff, and for when you loop. The other thing about the Clipper is that it is a little heavy. It is around 90-95 grams usually. Whereas most of those Butterfly blades are closer to 85 grams.
The Clipper is all wood and 7 plies, but it does the same basic thing that those technology blades do without the technology. The outer ply, Limba, is soft and SLOW, so that when you do touch stuff, it has a lot of control. But the outer ply is very thin. When you swing harder the ball penetrates the outer ply and reaches the inner plies, Ayous, which are springy and fast. You feel this snap from the ball sinking past the limba and then the ball shoots off the blade face almost like it has been catapulted. Those technology blades do this same exact thing which is what makes them so good. No other carbon blades that I have felt do this. The advantage to the Clipper is that, because it is all wood, you can feel the ball on the surface of the blade much better than with the carbon combination blades. The disadvantages are that it is heavier and it actually does not do this quite as well as some of those technology blades (but it does it more than well enough, many, many pros use this blade or one just like it from another company like the Joola Viva).
The other reason I did not suggest this one to you is that it is a little bit slower than most of those Butterfly blades and since you are coming from something sooo fast, it might be harder to get used to. It is really a great blade though and it is $55.00. The ones that say Clipper CR, even though, the info from the company says they are faster, my experience is that they are slower but have less of that snap. I love that feeling when the blade and ball make that snap sound that is not just the rubber.
You might also look at Stiga Optimum Plus:
http://www.tabletennisdb.com/blade/stiga-optimum-plus.html
I would also say you can look at the Avalox P-700, but it is almost the same as the Clipper and a little slow still. Or the Avalox P-500, it is what Kong Linghui used before Butterfly made him a blade. It is almost the same blade as the Butterfly Kong Linghui but it is made in Sweden and, to me, it has better feeling than the Butterfly version. But this one is probably also too slow for you since it is a little slower than the P-700.
Other blades from Stiga that are really good are expensive too though, like the Rosewood and Ebenholz. The last thing that is worth knowing about Stiga blades. A lot of people used to products like Butterfly blades get a Stiga blade and think that it has been manufactured poorly. This is because they come needing to be sanded and finished. I like this. Since I am the type of person who likes to do things like cut my rubbers and glue them on myself, or tech my blade, I have no problem with a blade that comes to my a little rough when brand new. Then I can tech it, sand it, finish it, and make it ready to play myself. Whereas, someone in a store who is putting your blade together for you is not going to care. It might come out looking professional, but it will not be tailored to your game. All the pros have their blades teched and set up before they use them. And all the pros put glue on how they like. For example, the Chinese tend to glue up before a match like when speed glue was okay, and they tend to use many coats of glue on their sponge for extra bounce. I have my own technique. But the person in the store is just going to glue it. I like sanding down the wings of the blade (the part that is between the handle and where the sponge starts) so that it conforms to the shape of my hand better. I use Minwax Wipe On Poly to finish the blade because you can put on a very thin coating that protects the wood without changing the playing characteristics of the wood. I also am strange in that I like my handle finished. A lot of people think my handle is slipper and are worried about when they are sweating a lot. I am not worried about that.
But many people just want to take the blade out of the box, have the rubber put on, and play. Butterfly is definitely better for that. But once you are playing, Stiga blades feel better than anything else in my opinion.
Funny, they almost feel cheap and disposable in a certain way, but, somehow because of that, you get amazing feeling for the ball with them.
Butterfly blades feel solid and well constructed, but to me, because of that, most of their blades play like a piece of furniture, like hitting with a solid board.
The new technology blades are the exception they really feel good. But, no carbon blade has as much feeling as a good all wood blade. So I personally like all wood blades.
Wow, this is long. I hope it is helpful.