#reclaimed wood

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Media benchSteel, reclaimed 70-year-old beams of Canadian Douglas Fircommission for particular placeMedia benchSteel, reclaimed 70-year-old beams of Canadian Douglas Fircommission for particular place

Media bench

Steel, reclaimed 70-year-old beams of Canadian Douglas Fir

commission for particular placement

Peppercorn Studio


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Farmhouse TableReclaimed barn beam, live edge burl of Hard Maple, hand-forged scrollsPeppercorn StudFarmhouse TableReclaimed barn beam, live edge burl of Hard Maple, hand-forged scrollsPeppercorn StudFarmhouse TableReclaimed barn beam, live edge burl of Hard Maple, hand-forged scrollsPeppercorn Stud

Farmhouse Table

Reclaimed barn beam, live edge burl of Hard Maple, hand-forged scrolls

Peppercorn Studio


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Rustic barn-reclaimed Hemlock and wrought iron tableThe hemlock is from a airy barn built in 1910; t

Rustic barn-reclaimed Hemlock and wrought iron table

The hemlock is from a airy barn built in 1910; the table base is hand-forged in a traditional coal-fired blacksmith’s furnace


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Wavelines in red - $150 - 7x10 erikbergdesign@gmail.comFrames in VG Fur

Wavelines in red - $150 - 7x10
[email protected]
Frames in VG Fur


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When Hurricane Katrina hit in 2005, it damaged more than a million housing units—half of which were When Hurricane Katrina hit in 2005, it damaged more than a million housing units—half of which were When Hurricane Katrina hit in 2005, it damaged more than a million housing units—half of which were

When Hurricane Katrina hit in 2005, it damaged more than a million housing units—half of which were in Louisiana. Houses and shops were submerged in more than 10 feet of water. In New Orleans, more than three-quarters of residents needed their homes repaired. Other buildings were gutted, remodeled, or simply demolished. New construction removed old materials in favor of more current ones.

To Alex Geriner, a New Orleans native and founder of Doorman Designs, that meant throwing out more than just scraps of wood. “The materials have a ton of history to them, and it kind of broke my heart to see all this stuff going to waste,” he says. “I realized there is a story there that needs to be saved.”

So he started making them into furniture, working with contractors and demolition companies to turn reclaimed wood and metal scraps into headboards, tables, chairs, and dressers. Some materials are salvaged from hurricane-damaged buildings, while others come from historic houses that are being renovated. Geriner says some of the wood he uses dates as far back as the 1800s, before the Civil War.

(viaDoorman Designs Furniture Maker Turns Hurricane Katrina Rubble into Furniture - CityLab)

— rw


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Lullington Heath 4 by Wycliffe Stutchbury120 x 120 cmTimber from dismantled western red cedar shedLu

Lullington Heath 4 byWycliffe Stutchbury

120 x 120 cm
Timber from dismantled western red cedar shed
Lullington, East Sussex, 2010

HeartwoodTumblr|Instagram


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