15 de abril de 2025
Choosing a Service Format That Actually Fits
A focused blog post built around practical decisions and constraints.
When you need a piece of furniture, a restored staircase, or a custom beam for your living room, the first question is rarely about wood species or joint types. It is about how the work will be done. Do you bring the piece to the workshop? Does someone come to your home? Is it a fixed design or something you can adjust along the way?
These are not minor details. The format of the service determines timelines, costs, and how much control you have over the result. Over the years, we have seen clients choose a format that sounds convenient but later creates friction. This post lays out three common service formats and the tradeoffs each one carries.
Workshop-Based Projects
This is the most common format for furniture and smaller architectural elements. You visit the workshop, discuss the piece, and we build it here. The advantage is full control over the environment: humidity, temperature, and tooling are consistent. We can use heavier machinery and take more time on joinery. The downside is that you need to transport the finished piece, and you cannot see the work in progress unless you schedule a visit.
On-Site Restoration and Installation
For staircases, beams, and built-in cabinetry, the work happens in your home. This format is unavoidable when the piece is too large to move or is part of the structure. The main constraint is the workspace. We set up dust barriers, work around your schedule, and adapt to the existing conditions of the building. On-site work usually takes longer because we cannot use certain machines, and drying times for finishes depend on the room's ventilation.
Hybrid: Design Consultation + Workshop Execution
Some projects benefit from an initial visit to take measurements and discuss proportions, followed by workshop fabrication and a final installation. This is common for custom staircases or large beams. It gives you the precision of workshop joinery with the fit of on-site work. The tradeoff is coordination: we need to schedule two visits, and the design must be finalized before fabrication starts.
Each format has its place. The key is to match the format to the piece, not the other way around. If you are unsure which one fits your project, we can walk through the constraints together during a short consultation.