Built to outlast the builder

Maine hardwoods shaped by hand and held by joinery.

I design furniture that honors the grain of the tree and the patience of the craft. No veneers, no shortcuts—only heirloom pieces made for the long haul.

From Forest to Floor

Honest work, built for several lifetimes.

I skip the veneers and the shortcuts. Every piece is a dialogue between the grain of the wood and the precision of the hand.

Local Harvest

I work exclusively with Maine-grown hardwoods—black walnut, white oak, and sugar maple—sourced from mills that prioritize forest health.

True Joinery

No screws, no pocket holes. I use hand-cut dovetails and mortise-and-tenon joints that tighten with age.

Natural Finishes

I use food-safe oils and waxes that let you feel the actual texture of the timber, not a layer of plastic.

Slow Production

I take on twelve commissions a year. This allows me to obsess over the grain matching and structural integrity of every singular commission.

Bespoke Geometry

Every dimension is tuned to your space. I design for the way light hits your room and how your body moves around the object.

Heirloom Provenance

Each piece is signed and dated. These are not seasonal trends; they are future artifacts designed to be passed down through generations.

From the hearth

Objects that hold their value through the generations

Notes from the people who live with these pieces every day.

The walnut dining table isn’t just furniture; it’s the anchor of our home. You can feel the intention in the joinery every time you touch the grain.
Elias Thorne
Architect
I spent months looking for a maker who respected the material enough to let it speak. Fallow delivered a desk that feels like it grew out of the floor.
Sarah Jenkins
Writer
Traditional dovetails and a finish that invites the hand. It is increasingly rare to find work this honest and uncompromising.
Marcus Vane
Collector
The cherry sideboard has aged beautifully over the last three years. The patina is developing exactly as promised. It’s a masterpiece of restraint.
Helena Ross
Interior Designer

A legacy starts with a single commission.

Whether it’s a dining table or a singular chair, let’s build something that outlives us both. Currently accepting projects for late 2024.