By Mike Wilson
Vermont-based Wood & Wood Inc. incorporates a mix of materials to create a themed desk for a client in the coffee business. Click here to browse photos documenting the process behind the final product.
Sparky Potter (left), owner of Wood & Wood Inc., and Dan Cox, who commissioned the piece for his office at Coffee Enterprises, pose behind the finished product. The desk took its artistic inspiration as well as its materials from a wide variety of sources. |
Although Wood & Wood Inc. specializes in manufacturing and designing signs from its namesake material, the companyâs embrace of mixed media has helped keep customers flocking.
âWe started out working with all kinds of wood, but we didnât realize how enamored we would become with every product ever made,â says Sparky Potter, owner of the Waitsfield, VT-based custom shop. âNo one else will mess with so much mixed media. Weâre thrilled with the mix of materials, and to this day, my quest is to nose around with things we havenât worked with.â
Wood & Wood began in the early 1970s when Potter acquired a wood-burning kit and began recreating album covers with wood. His wife began selling the projects at craft-fairs, which lead to people taking notice of lettering on the wooden album covers. Sign commissions began coming in, and the company was born. The business, which has about nine full-time employees split between design and fabrication departments, specializes in signs, but it also fabricates a variety of custom furniture for the office and home.
âWe build as many tables as signs. Signs are often the initial way to get known through a client and expose them to all of our custom woodworking â from storefronts, to interiors, to building models, to doing clock spaces for towers,â Potter says. âSigns are just our initial entry.â
A custom desk for the president of Coffee Enterprises recently highlighted many of the companyâs strengths through a blend of mixed materials and artistic design that created a well-received project.
âDan (Cox, president of Coffee Enterprises) came in with a dream that was a partially hatched egg when he walked into the shop,â Potter says. "So my job was to just let him talk and see where he was going with this thing.â
Each panel features a different season in the mountains behind the waves. All the desk panel art graphics were outlined with a wood burning tool and artistically painted. Click here to see photos documenting the progress of the panels. |
One of the first elements mentioned by the client was incorporating an old letterhead with characters rowing coffee cups. Next, Potter says he asked Cox about the deskâs location and realized it would be near a window overlooking a lake in the Adirondacks.
âWeâre a heavily four-seasoned world here, so we decided to make the four seasons part of it (which is reflected in the mountains in each panel),â he says. âThen we fantasized about incorporating waves, and came up with a Polynesian wave structure that looked pretty cool⦠We decided to curve the desk pretty early in the process too.â
After sketching the project, Wood & Wood built a mockup using Masonite and Styrofoam.
âWe even included the painting to get to the point where we had the scale and layout correct,â Potter says. âIt was all very diligent, almost all done with scale and free-hand drawings right until the mockup â most of the work was done at full size⦠Because of the curve of the desk, we had to work outside of our normal comfort zone.â
With the mockup, the company realized artistically painted Wacky Board would work to create the waves and could be styled with wood burning. The background is Masonite because âit holds flex nicely and doesnât pucker up,â Potter says. The characters in the coffee cup boats are ¼ inch maple veneer so they would hold their shape better than the Wacky Board, he adds.
The Koi fish were cut from 1/8 inch aluminum and painted, and the desk was fabricated with Birdseye maple veneer over an MDF top with an orange leather writing area that pops out for easy replacement. It features cut out and curving lacewood supports, which matched cabinets already in the office, Potter says.
âThe (desk) top was a chore. The top edge is unique, and we wanted to go in and put hardwood there, but the costs got out of control for something curved like that,â Potter says. Instead, the company used stacked MDF board with a birdseye maple veneer and routed the edge.
"The veneer on top actually has a joint on the far left side. We created a spline of birdseye maple mixed with birdseye veneer,â he says.
A photo of the desk in the dark. Wood & Wood installed red and white LED lights above the rowing coffee cup characters as a final creative touch. |
As a final touch, Potter says they decided to create a cavity to hold LED lights above the rowing characters. Both red and white lights were used, and the client can flip a switch to change colors to fit his mood.
The desk features more than just looks, Potter adds.
âThis is also totally functional behind. We built a full cabinet on the right hand side to receive computer information as well as a secret drawer,â Potter says. âThe left side of the desk has filing cabinets.â
The desk was delivered in three pieces so it would fit through the officeâs doorway. The top was brought in as a big, fully-finished piece, while the two other pieces consisted of a three-or four-foot-long left hand section and the large curving area. Since its installation, the client has been pleased and Potter says he has even seen the deskâs popularity in action.
â(The client) was the initial designer, he has top billing for the design of it. He had a vision that âI want people to walk into this place and have their jaw drop,ââ Potter says. âI went out to his place for a party a few weeks ago, and everyone ends up in his office hanging around his table.â
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