Saturday, July 5, 2014

Shipping by freight

I have a lot of people ask about shipping. I ship worldwide but its not as simple as a small end table every time. I routinely ship very large items up to 10.feet once in the crate and can weigh up to 1000 lbs or more for some. As you can imagine its quite a process. First I build a very heavy duty crate around each item.which can.cost $100 or more just for the materials alone. Then a few hours to build it and wrap and secure the piece inside. Then loading is not always so simple. A lot of my pieces are very.big and can not fit.sideways into the freight truck door so it.has to go longways. This is quite a challenge when you have no loading dock. Some people are shocked by freight costs but if you look at all that goes on with it, it makes sense and is quite reasonable. Were not shipping pillows and something I've spent months building and a client has waited for needs to.get there safe.

terrible imported junk furniture

Just a quick post.  For the first time in my life, I happened to be near a Restoration Hardware store, and went in.  I post this because I get emails from people with pictures attached saying, "can you build this but in my size?"  my answers vary and are hard to give, but basically come down to these basic things...

1.  I will not copy someone elses work. There is not a challenge in doing this, and I have had it done to me so many times, and a couple people are literally building a business off my designs, so I would not do the same.  I want to build unique, handcrafted, durable, high quality items with no corners cut.

2. This will echo number 2 a bit, but I will not build junk like the store mentioned or others that easily come to mind.  Or for that matter some of the people copying me.  I spend a lot of time on the details, and others do not.  Not to mention I use the highest quality wood, rivets, and bolts, and finishes available.  It all cost me more time and money, but I truly want it to last.  Back to Restoration hardware.  They sell cheap soft woods like pine that are unfinished and will never hold up to any kind of use, along with a strange coating and very cheap imported scrap metal for materials.  It all adds up to a very flimsy, and disappointing product.  What I do and these other stores are not even comparable.  I spend hours picking out materials and pouring over decisions, and my patina process along with clear coat can take 3-4 days and is genuine. Not some sprayed on paint coating.  I know my wife went to touch the fake door lock on one of the pieces at Restoration Hardware and it was not a door lock at all but how you opened the door.  We could hardly control our laughter.  There is a reason they have very dim lighting in the store. Think about it.

My purpose here is not necessarily to put these other stores down, but it all goes back to why I started my business.  I was tired of buying junk, and learned from the saying "you get what you pay for" .  I cant think of many times if any where I spent less money and was actually happy in the end.  There was always that regret that was hard to admit out  in the open.  All to save a few hundred dollars, but in the end I never saved anything, because I ended up selling the piece of junk I bought a starting the search again.  What I do is so far different than any of these big chain stores.  If you really dont think there is a difference and just want the cheapest product there is, then they may be a fit for you and I urge you to buy from them.  You will have to learn the lesson on your own.


Tuesday, June 17, 2014

Kitchen.cabinet

This is a kitchen cabinet I just completed. I built it so it will fit right into a nook in the wall the homeowners have built during construction of the house. Its 9 feet long and 2.5 feet deep and 36 inches high. Every door has a keyed lock and a door catch. Along with the handles I've been making to put on most things lately. It has reclaimed elm wood on top and I spent a lot if time on little details so it turned out extra clean in.the end.

Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Bar cart

This is a bar cart I built for Jessica Jubelirer Design. Has locking door with adjustable shelf, reclaimed Douglas fir, vintage casters, wine bottle and glass holders, a drawer, and bottle shelves on end plus lots of little details. The strip on front bottom is removeable so fridge slides right in then it screws back on. I built the overlay door to look just like right side door but it goes on fridge. I had a 10 pound weight limit for this. There's also a slot to slide glass in right side door and its held with set screws.

Saturday, May 24, 2014

Hostess stand

This is a hostess stand for hotel Teatro in Denver. It has two drawers and 6 adjustable shelves. Also a false back that allows wires to run from top through hollow space in back to the bottom so the cords really are not seen. Big money if you want these things.

Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Fridge overlay door panel

The door on left is a solid 3x1 tube door with a slot on back side that a piece of glass will slide into. The overlay on right is a wood core door I covered with 18 gauge sheet metal bent around by bending brake and welded up. Then its routered out on back to let the mesh sandwich between fridge door and overlay panel. I'm not showing the backs because I Dont want to give my secrets away. The point was to make them look the same but the overlay door had a weight limit of 10 pounds. I came in about 7 lbs. This was a lot of fun. Will shoe finished piece soon.