There's craftspeople, there's artists, and their hands inform what's in front of you. We want to give these trees that are coming down. A new purpose and a new life. And, and so once it goes on to somebody who owns it, there then a part of that narrative. I think that's part of why we like working with the wood when it's wet. Like we, we do work with dried wood and we make things that are more reputable, but the woods that we source that are the more specialty things. They, they're coming from unique locations that are not a tree farm. They are from often a place that was residential. And so it is tied to that history of that place, that space, the people that lived there. So we turn it, it looks perfectly symmetrical. Everything is just no cracks and then. As it dries over the course of several months, the tree takes back over and things warp, things crack, and I think that seeing a piece that has that certain level of character. To me it reminds. Me. That it's a tree, you know what I mean? Like it's it calls to mind that history that it had and and the material and that it was a living thing.
Principal at Wakely Consulting Group
4moVery cool! Love everything you do!