Your furniture should tell a story.
Not a story about the time you went to Ikea and met that cute girl in Textiles with whom things ended amicably shortly thereafter but hey: check out this rug she helped you pick out.
Rather, furniture that tells its own story, in the fibers of its wood.
That’s the ethos behind Fern & Roby, makers of beautiful and pedigreed audio wares, kitchen tables and small-machined goods, available now.
F&R, a husband-and-wife team based in Richmond, VA, source and craft their wood right here in the U.S. of A. — sometimes as nearby as four blocks from their studio.
Their claim: “Make beautiful things that enhance and elevate the everyday.”
Yes.
The couple’s designs center on the source materials: wood, steel and reclaimed objects.
Meaning the grains, colors and natural irregularities here are front and center.
A few things we dug:
-
A walnut slab dining table crafted from a single 12-foot slab of American hardwood and featuring a solid cast-bronze base
-
Cubed bookshelf speakers machined from a solid beam of heart pine that was salvaged from a 19th-century Virginia factory
-
A rock maple butcher block island kitchen with cast-iron legs reproduced from an old-timey kick-press machine
Plus: a stainless steel jigger with engraved traditional toasts and, coming soon, a cast-iron turntable with bronze platter and Rega tone arm, supported by salvaged heart pine.
For everything, custom orders and white glove delivery are available.
All in all, a good story to share.
Related:
The Manliest Letter You’ll Ever Write
The vintage, elegant stationery at Minnesota’s Brown Ink starts with a flat letterpress card, a time- and labor-intensive technique that dates back to the 15th century. It also means each card, made one at a time by hand, is unique.
This article was featured in the InsideHook newsletter. Sign up now.