— Process & Method

No assumptions. No filler spec. Just your build.

Every project runs through the same structured review — dimensions, load path, transit stress, and schedule — before a single board is cut.

01

Spec Intake — Your Dimensions, Destination, Deadline

We begin with three fixed inputs: exact product dimensions, final destination, and required delivery date. Nothing is estimated or assumed at this stage.

If you have engineering prints, we work from them. If you don't, we measure the product directly — in-shop or on-site — and build the spec ourselves.

02

Load-Path

Material grade, joinery method, and hardware selection are determined by actual weight and transit stress — not by a standard template. Each build is reviewed for structural integrity before the cut list is finalized.

Shop-built and on-site projects follow the same build review. The location changes; the load standard does not.

Close-up overhead shot of a wooden crate panel mid-assembly on a workshop floor, measuring tape stretched across the board, pencil marks visible, metal corner hardware beside it, even north-facing studio light, no shadows
Close-up overhead shot of a wooden crate panel mid-assembly on a workshop floor, measuring tape stretched across the board, pencil marks visible, metal corner hardware beside it, even north-facing studio light, no shadows
/ In the Shop

Cut List Locked Before Any Board Is Touched

Once the structural review clears, we generate a finalized cut list — every dimension confirmed, every hardware component specified, timeline-locked to your delivery date.

On-site builds get the same pre-build package delivered ahead of the crew's arrival. No guessing on dimensions when the clock is running.

Start With Your Dimensions

Tell us the product, the destination, and the date. We'll confirm capability, outline the structural approach, and give you a clear timeline — before any commitment.