Bench brief

Craft is a sequence of decisions, not a label.

This page is about the work after the material is chosen: how parts are joined, how a surface is built up, how finish is allowed to cure, and what gets checked before a piece is packed.

01

Built for the part, not the photo.

Chair frames, table aprons, casework, and moving parts each ask for a different construction answer.

02

Finish is chosen for ownership.

We prefer a premium hardwax oil finish because it stays close to the wood and can be maintained over time.

03

Made to order means time at the bench.

The 6-10 week production window is used for fitting, sanding, finishing, curing, inspection, and packing.

Finish lab

Why hardwax oil, not a heavy plastic film.

Finish is the part of the craft you touch every day. We choose a premium hardwax oil system because it protects the walnut while keeping the surface natural, repairable, and honest to the material.

StandardWalnutry hardwax oilCommon PU lacquerWhy it matters
TouchOpen and tactileWarm under hand, with the grain still present.More coatedA film layer sits between the hand and the wood.The surface should feel like walnut, not like a sealed object.
AgingPatina-friendlyMinor signs of life can blend into the surface.Film damageChips and deep scratches can look separate from the wood.Furniture should age in a way that feels natural to a home.
RepairMore serviceableMany minor marks can be cleaned, refreshed, or spot-treated.Harder to spot repairOften requires sanding and refinishing a larger area.Long-term ownership is easier when the finish can be maintained.
CareSensible daily careCoasters, prompt spill wiping, and gentle cleaners.Lower routine careBut repairs can be more involved when damage happens.We prefer a finish that trades a little care for a better surface.
Finish goal

Protect the wood without making it feel synthetic.

Ownership goal

Allow the surface to be refreshed instead of treated as disposable.

Visual goal

Let walnut keep its depth, tone, and quiet movement in light.

Joinery matrix

The construction changes with the job.

A dining chair does not ask the same thing as a tabletop. A drawer does not fail the same way as a leg frame. Craftsmanship means choosing the right joint or hardware for the actual stress point.

Use case

Chair and table frames

We favor mortise-and-tenon style structure where the frame must resist racking and daily load.

Goal: strength through the wood, not just through a fastener.

Use case

Wide tops and panels

Construction has to respect seasonal movement so the surface can expand and contract naturally.

Goal: stability without forcing the wood flat forever.

Use case

Moving or adjustable parts

Hardware is used when the function truly requires it: movement, adjustment, knock-down shipping, or support.

Goal: honest engineering, not decorative purity.

Build ledger

What happens during the 6-10 week build window.

The timeline is not empty waiting time. It is where fit, surface, finish, cure, and inspection happen before the piece is released for freight.

01

Confirm

Order details, configuration, and production notes are checked before work begins.

02

Fit

Parts are selected and oriented for grain, role, and expected movement.

03

Join

Joints, frames, panels, or hardware points are cut and fitted for the design.

04

Sand

Edges and surfaces are refined so the finish does not hide rough work.

05

Finish

Hardwax oil is applied and allowed to settle before handling and packing.

06

Inspect

Structure, surface, feel, and packing protection are checked before shipping.

Freight delivery happens after production and packing. The build window and shipping window are separate parts of the made-to-order process.

Final check

The last pass is practical, not ceremonial.

Before a piece is packed, the check is focused on the parts that matter in a real home: stability, touch, finish, alignment, and protection during freight.

Structure

Square, stable, and tight

Frames and joints are checked for wobble, gaps, and alignment.

Surface

Even under changing light

Sanding marks, rough edges, and uneven sheen are easier to catch before packing.

Finish

Cured enough to handle

The oil-wax surface needs time before it is wrapped and protected.

Freight

Packed for the hard part

Large surfaces, corners, and edges are protected for furniture delivery.

Next step

Craft is easier to trust when it is specific.

Look at the joint, underside, edge, finish, and care notes. Those details tell you how the piece was built and how it is meant to live.