It's about time I did this. People always ask me what I actually DO. So this is not my best work, only the very typical residential entries I've built over the past year since owning a digital camera. To put things in perspective, I've built over four hundred entries so far this year....
Lost in the woodwork....
Here's another from in the workshop, one with a little challenge. It's in African Ribbonstripe Tiama---
This set is for a pantry and was featured in Southern Living Magazine. The contractor who bought it is a big shot. He threw a big shindig the other night at his ranch where he barbequed a three hundred pound elk and almost as much shrimp. I of course didn't attend because in my eyes all the decorators, sales reps, are all making money off the shit I build. But I could never be a business man. I belong in the workshop.
Here's another one that was interesting.
The same one on the interior, unfinished.
Here is one with gothic muntins.
A serpentine French set.
This I built by hand because I like the smell of Claro Walnut.
Hard for people to believe, but it there's only about 30 man hours involved in building this:
But you don't know the secret. You see, I use state of the art cnc machines to do much of the cutting of parts. I write the code that utilizes half a million bucks worth of robotics:
Lost in the woodwork....
Here's another from in the workshop, one with a little challenge. It's in African Ribbonstripe Tiama---
This set is for a pantry and was featured in Southern Living Magazine. The contractor who bought it is a big shot. He threw a big shindig the other night at his ranch where he barbequed a three hundred pound elk and almost as much shrimp. I of course didn't attend because in my eyes all the decorators, sales reps, are all making money off the shit I build. But I could never be a business man. I belong in the workshop.
Here's another one that was interesting.
The same one on the interior, unfinished.
Here is one with gothic muntins.
A serpentine French set.
This I built by hand because I like the smell of Claro Walnut.
Hard for people to believe, but it there's only about 30 man hours involved in building this:
But you don't know the secret. You see, I use state of the art cnc machines to do much of the cutting of parts. I write the code that utilizes half a million bucks worth of robotics:
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At least you got home before six a.m. Even though you didn't actually sleep at home.