— Raleigh, NC

One practice. Every architectural finish.

Interior millwork, stairways, hardwood floors, and exterior structures—each category built to read as part of the house, not placed against it.

Close environmental shot of a built-in cherry bookshelf filling an alcove, hand-fitted adjustable shelves with routed edge profiles, north-facing window light grazing the face grain and casting fine shadow lines across the shelf edges, full-room context showing the unit as integral to the wall architecture
Close environmental shot of a built-in cherry bookshelf filling an alcove, hand-fitted adjustable shelves with routed edge profiles, north-facing window light grazing the face grain and casting fine shadow lines across the shelf edges, full-room context showing the unit as integral to the wall architecture
/ Interior Millwork

Mouldings, floors, and built-in shelves

Crown, base, casing, and panel mouldings are hand-selected for grain direction and fitted with no caulk shortcuts. Every profile is chosen against the room's existing architecture.

Hardwood floors are slow work—species, cut, and board width settled before a nail is driven. Built-in bookshelves are designed as permanent furniture, not cabinet boxes applied to a wall

Environmental wide shot looking up a finished oak staircase, golden-hour side light streaming from a tall window and raking across the tread nosing profiles and turned balusters, grain detail sharp on the newel post cap, the staircase receding into the upper floor as part of the house structure
Environmental wide shot looking up a finished oak staircase, golden-hour side light streaming from a tall window and raking across the tread nosing profiles and turned balusters, grain detail sharp on the newel post cap, the staircase receding into the upper floor as part of the house structure
/ Stairway Upgrades

Stairs crafted to last for generations

Treads, risers, newels, and railings are matched in species and finish. The joinery at each baluster is fitted—not filled—so the assembly reads as a single architectural element from the ground floor up.

/ Exterior Structures

Decks, fences, and pergolas

Exterior work uses the same material discipline as the interior—hand-selected lumber, no filler at the joints, post and beam connections detailed to last the full life of the structure.

Decks are designed around the house's existing geometry. Fences and pergolas carry the same grain and proportion logic—built to read as architecture, not yard furniture.

Ready when the scope is clear

Bring the room, the staircase, or the deck plan. We'll talk through materials, fit, and what the work needs to become part of the house permanently.