Big Drawers super-sizes furniture

At 6-foot-4 and sporting a XXL shirt, Andy Steinberg knows what it’s like to be plus-sized. He also knows it’s often hard to fit those plus-sized clothes into a normal size drawer. That eventually gave birth to his business, appropriately called Big Drawers Furniture.

From customer to custom builder 

Steinberg wasn’t making furniture or intending to make furniture when he first set out on a quest for a chest of drawers big enough to meet his needs. After a fruitless search in a wide variety of furniture stores, he resorted to having the piece custom made.

When it arrived, not only was he pleased with the results, but it also impressed someone not so plus-sized. Andy’s girlfriend, a more diminutive 5-foot-five took one look at the drawers and said she wanted one, too, adding, “There isn’t a woman out there with enough drawer space.”

After some time honing his woodworking skills, Steinberg abandoned previous career paths in marine biology and computer system sales. He opened his woodworking shop in 2005 and started selling to a very large – literally and figuratively – niche market. The business is all custom. “I work to give someone what they want,” he says. “And when that happens, I see the excitement and appreciation from the client, and that is so rewarding to me.”

Meeting a need 

Steinberg says his research shows that 60 percent of women and more than two-thirds of all adults in the U.S. are considered plus-size. But standard-size furniture has not kept up with the size of the people using it.

So, how big is big? Imagine a drawer that can hold 40 XXL golf shirts or 12 XXL men’s sweatshirts or bulky sweaters. And drawers that big have to be built strong, so Steinberg uses solid wood and dovetail constructions with heavy-duty Blumotion full-extension slides for maximum access.

And the price? Steinberg says a chest of drawers typically runs about $4,500. He’s been marketing through stores and word of mouth and is resisting suggestions to outsource or license the concept to other manufacturers. He likes the concept of supplying quality custom products.

“My furniture hails to an era when ‘made in the USA’ meant quality,” he says. “And I care about quality. There is an added price for quality, but the value of this furniture is far greater than the price.”

More than drawers 

Although the original emphasis was on super-sized chests of drawers, Steinberg has expanded into other areas of maximum storage.

One recent project was a makeup vanity that Steinberg describes as functioning like a fishing tackle box. Not only does it have big drawers with custom interior storage for makeup items, but also it has trays within drawers that automatically lift up along with the lid.

With a fondness for quality domestic hardwoods, Steinberg features figured solid wood in most of his projects. He even has been known to do some urban forestry to salvage wood from trees being cut down in the city, he says. In a recent effort, he’s been using offcuts from these often colorful woods to make cutting boards, which he sells as a benefit for an anti-cancer charity.
 

Have something to say? Share your thoughts with us in the comments below.

Profile picture for user willsampson
About the author
William Sampson

William Sampson is a lifelong woodworker, and he has been an advocate for small-scale entrepreneurs and lean manufacturing since the 1980s. He was the editor of Fine Woodworking magazine in the early 1990s and founded WoodshopBusiness magazine, which he eventually sold and merged with CabinetMaker magazine. He helped found the Cabinet Makers Association in 1998 and was its first executive director. Today, as editorial director of Woodworking Network and FDMC magazine he has more than 20 years experience covering the professional woodworking industry. His popular "In the Shop" tool reviews and videos appear monthly in FDMC.