My Story (1)
Growing up in mountains, living a minimalist lifestyle, I watched my grandfather shape wood into practical art. While he didn't directly teach me woodworking, he instilled in me a deep respect for materials and an attitude of resourcefulness and experimentation. Inspired by his values, I design custom furniture from reclaimed American wood, often mixed with metal, epoxy, or other textures. Each item begins with your story and a blend of materials, transformed into a functional showpiece that suits your living space. Born from a commitment to thoughtful use of resources and constant experimentation, Grainstories helps families preserve memories through sustainable craft.
My Story (2)
Growing up in mountains, living a minimalist lifestyle, I watched my grandfather shape wood into practical art. While he didn't directly teach me woodworking, he instilled in me a deep respect for materials and an attitude of resourcefulness and experimentation. Inspired by his values, I design custom furniture from reclaimed American wood, often mixed with metal, epoxy, or other textures. Each item begins with your story and a blend of materials, transformed into a functional showpiece that suits your living space. Born from a commitment to thoughtful use of resources and constant experimentation, Grainstories helps families preserve memories through sustainable craft.
How it’s made
We start with your story. Every piece I build starts long before a board hits the workbench. It starts with you, your space, your story, and how you actually live with your furniture.
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We select materials that fit your story. I work primarily with reclaimed and salvaged American wood - old floorboards, beams, tabletops, and offcuts that still have plenty of life left in them. Where it makes sense, I’ll blend in metal, epoxy, milled wood, or micro-cement to add contrast or solve a functional problem (like stability, durability, or cable management), always keeping the wood as the hero. If you have a board, an old piece, or material with sentimental value, we can explore weaving that into the design.
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Once I understand your needs and have a sense of the available materials, I sketch a few design options around your dimensions, budget, and style. This might include different leg styles, edge profiles, epoxy accents, or layout ideas for coffee tables, mantles, headboards, console tables, or serving boards. We review these together, refine what you like, and land on a final direction. At this point, I’ll share a clear estimate and timeline, and with an initial deposit, your project is officially on the bench.
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In the shop, I mill, join, and shape the wood so it’s structurally sound but still carries its original character, small scars, knots, and grain shifts that tell a story. I use a mix of hand tools and machines, depending on what the piece needs for strength and precision. Epoxy pours, metal details, and micro-cement work are done in careful stages, with plenty of time for curing, sanding, and re-checking the details. Throughout the process, I can share progress photos or short updates so you can watch your piece come to life.
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Finally, I dial in the finish, usually a protective, low-sheen finish that’s meant to be lived on, not just looked at. I test for wobble, sharp corners, and usability: does the coffee cup sit flat, do the doors open smoothly, does the piece feel solid and honest? Once everything is right, we arrange pickup, delivery, or shipping depending on the size and your location. The goal is simple: when your piece arrives, it should feel like it has always belonged in your home - functional, beautiful, and quietly telling your story every day.