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Tag: kitchen tools
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Thirteen Years in the Making: My Collection of Custom Wooden Spoons
After thirteen years of marriage, I finally have three custom wooden spoons from Rexโand let me tell you, they were worth the wait.
It all started with one spoon about a year ago. Rex crafted it with his typical attention to detail: a thin, long handle and a flat lip that’s become my secret weapon for breaking up ground meats. At 12ยพ inches long, it’s shaped more like a spatula with a gentle dip, giving me both a rounded edge for stirring and a straight edge for scraping bowls and pans clean.
This workhorse has survived everything our kitchen (and our kids) could throw at itโmultiple dishwasher cycles and even an overnight soak when someone forgot to wash it. Those weathered marks you see? That’s just the character of the wood shining through, not damage. Rex always says the wood tells its own story.
Two New Additions to the Family
But Rex noticed I preferred a thicker handle for comfort, so he designed two new spoons just for me. The first is my new favorite tasting spoonโtruly round with a bit more depth than a typical taster, and a flat bottom that won’t roll around. At 10ยฝ inches long, it has a clever little lip that rests perfectly on the edge of pots and pans. No more fishing spoons out of simmering sauces.
The third spoon is my cookie-making companion, also 10ยฝ inches long. Rex designed this one specifically because I was constantly complaining about butter that was only “mostly” softened when I wanted to bake. This spoon handles stubborn butter like a dream, though I suspect it’ll become useful for much more than cookies.
The Magic of Custom Pieces
What I love most about these spoons is that they’re not just beautifulโthey’re designed for real life, real cooking, real moments in the kitchen. Each one solves a specific problem while bringing that handcrafted warmth that only comes from wood shaped by experienced hands.
Rex spent over 40 years perfecting his craft, and it shows in every curve and angle. These aren’t just kitchen tools; they’re functional art pieces that make cooking more enjoyable.
More Beautiful Work Coming Soon
Speaking of functional art, I’ve been busy photographing our latest creations, and they’ll be available on the website over the weekend. From those stunning resin pens you see here to new serving pieces, each item tells its own story of reclaimed materials transformed into something special.
If you’re ready for your own custom wooden spoonsโor any handcrafted piece that brings both beauty and function to your daily lifeโwe’d love to create something just for you. Every piece we make is one-of-a-kind, designed to become part of your family’s story.
Because the best kitchen tools aren’t just functionalโthey’re the ones that make you smile every time you reach for them.
Ready for your own custom wooden spoons or other handcrafted pieces? Contact us to start creating something special, or browse our collection of beautiful hand-carved items.
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Why Our Kitchen Tools Outlast Everything Else
There’s an uncomfortable truth about most kitchen tools: they’re designed to break. Not immediately, but eventually, so you’ll buy replacements. Planned obsolescence isn’t just for electronics โ it’s built into almost everything we buy, including the tools we use to feed our families.
We’re not about that.
When Rex crafts a Maple & Walnut French Rolling Pin, he’s thinking about how it will feel in your hands not just today, but twenty years from now. He chooses wood with tight, stable grain patterns from trusted sources like Cook Woods. He turns each piece to precise tolerances that account for how the wood will move over time. He applies finishes that will protect and nourish the wood through thousands of uses.
This isn’t just craftsmanship โ it’s a philosophy. We believe kitchen tools should be companions, not consumables. That rolling pin should be something you pass down to your children, along with your grandmother’s pie recipe and the story of where you got it. These useful pieces are an heirloom they will not only love, but continue using.
The materials matter enormously. Mass-produced tools often use whatever wood is cheapest, regardless of its suitability for kitchen use. We select species based on their working properties: maple for its tight grain and natural antimicrobial properties, walnut for its stability and resistance to moisture, cherry for its beauty and durability. When a piece needs extra stability, we use Cactus Juice penetrating stabilizer, which hardens the wood fibers from the inside out.
But it’s not just about the wood. It’s about understanding how these tools will be used. A cutting board needs to be hard enough to protect your knives but soft enough not to dull them. A rolling pin needs perfect balance so it rolls smoothly without requiring excessive pressure. A knife handle needs to feel secure even when your hands are wet or flour-dusted.
Rex has been perfecting these details for over four decades. He understands how different woods behave in various climates, how grain orientation affects strength, how the smallest variation in thickness can change a tool’s performance. This isn’t knowledge you can download or inherit โ it’s earned through years of making, testing, adjusting, and making again.
We hear from customers all the time who still have kitchen tools their grandparents used daily. Not museum pieces, but working tools that show their age gracefully, developing the kind of patina and character that only comes from decades of use. That’s what we are working to make โ not just for this generation, but for the next.
The economics work out too. A cheap rolling pin might cost $15, but if you have to replace it every few years, you’ll spend more over time than if you’d bought one quality piece that lasts forever. Our tools cost more upfront because we’re not cutting corners on materials, time, or craftsmanship.
More importantly, there’s something deeply satisfying about using tools that improve with age instead of degrading. Wood develops character as it’s used. It learns your hands, your kitchen, your cooking style. A well-made tool becomes an extension of yourself in ways that plastic never can.
In a throwaway world, making things to last is almost a radical act. But every time you reach for that perfectly balanced rolling pin or that cutting board that still looks beautiful after years of daily use, you’re reminded that quality endures โ and that some things are worth doing right the first time.