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Tag: resin art
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Good News: The Website Fixes Are In (And We Need Your Eagle Eyes!)
Remember those pesky website gremlins we mentioned? The ones making product variations jump around and throwing off the whole look of the site? Well, Dawn rolled up her sleeves (metaphorically, she pulled on her big girl panties and contacted help desks), and we brought in some help to get things sorted.
Here’s what’s fixed:
The product variations are now behaving themselves—no more musical chairs with the dropdown menus. And those proportion issues that made everything look a bit wonky on certain screens? Gone. The site should now look the way we intended it to, whether you’re browsing on your phone during your morning coffee or on your laptop while planning your holiday gift list.
We’re Offering a Thank-You (With a Discount)
Here’s where you come in, and where we get to thank you for being part of our community: If you spot anything that’s still not working right—a broken link, a wonky image, text that’s doing something weird—send us an email. We’ll send you a code for 10% off your next purchase, good through Christmas.
We figure you’re already looking at the site, and your fresh eyes might catch something we’ve been staring at too long to notice. Plus, it gives us an excuse to say thank you for helping us make things better.
Some New Things We’re Trying
We’ve added a few features to the site, and we wanted to be upfront about what they are and why they’re there:
Blog Subscriptions: You can now subscribe to get our posts delivered right to your inbox. We promise not to flood you—just the occasional story from the workshop, updates on new pieces, and maybe a behind-the-scenes peek at what Rex is working on.
Voluntary Contributions: If you’ve been following along and want to support what we’re doing, we’ve added a way to contribute. No pressure whatsoever, but we’re grateful to everyone who believes in what we create.
Testing Ads: This is the big one, and we need your honest feedback here. We’ve added some advertising to the site. We know—we’re not thrilled about it either. I hates pop-up ads (seriously, Rex has had to listen about them more than once). Unfortunately, with our current setup, we can’t just turn off the pop-ups alone. It’s all or nothing, at least for the next 90 days.
Here’s the truth: this year has been challenging income-wise. We’re exploring different ways to keep doing what we love while also, you know, paying for materials and keeping the lights on. If the ads are too annoying—and we mean really annoying, not just “eh, I could do without them”—please let us know. We’d rather figure out something else than make your experience on our site frustrating.
Why We’re Sharing All This
One of the things we’ve learned over the years is that our customers aren’t just customers—you’re part of our story. When things are going well, you celebrate with us. When we’re trying something new, you give us honest feedback. And when times are tough, you understand because you’re real people with your own challenges.
We could pretend everything is always perfect, but that’s not who we are. Rex spent three hours yesterday on plans and blanks for a new product (honey pots!), and he refused to settle for “good enough.” That’s the kind of honesty and dedication we bring to our work, and it extends to how we communicate with you too.
What Hasn’t Changed
Even with all these updates and new features, the heart of what we do remains the same. Rex is still in the workshop every day, turning reclaimed wood into something beautiful. Dawn is still sourcing materials, creating resin blanks, and updating every product page for consistency (we have over 400 variations, it takes time). We’re still committed to creating functional heirlooms that bring beauty to your everyday moments.
Every cutting board still tells a story. Every pen is still one-of-a-kind. Every piece is still made with the same care and attention it would get if we were making it for our own family—because in a way, we are.
We’re Here for Questions
As always, if you have questions about the website updates, concerns about the ads, or just want to chat about wood (Rex is always up for that), reach out to us. We read every email, and we genuinely appreciate hearing from you.
Thanks for sticking with us through the updates, the experiments, and the occasional technical hiccup. Your support means everything, and we’re honored to create pieces that become part of your family stories.
Until next time, keep finding beauty in the everyday moments.
— Rex & Dawn
P.S. — Seriously, if you find an error on the site, don’t be shy. That 10% off code has your name on it, and you’d be doing us a real favor.
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Back to the Drawing Board (Again): A Website Update from Dawn
Ever wonder what happens when a former SQL programmer meets WordPress? Well, you get someone who knows just enough to be dangerous — and stubborn enough to keep trying until something works.
Here’s the honest truth: I’m rebuilding our website. Again. For probably the sixth time this year.
The Problem (And Why I’m Not Giving Up)
Our beautiful pieces deserve better than a website where product variations don’t show images. I mean, who’s going to buy a pen when they can’t see what the different wood options actually look like? Nobody, that’s who. And after switching themes to fix one problem, suddenly we’re stuck with black and white everything and a store page that’s acting like a moody teenager.
The numbers don’t lie either — $30 in online sales over 12 months tells the whole story. Rex is creating incredible work daily, but if people can’t see it properly online, how can they fall in love with it?
What’s Different This Time
I’ve switched hosts, I’m learning WordPress and WooCommerce from scratch (again), and yes, I know there are professionals who do this for a living. In fact, I’ve got one lined up for when the grant funding comes through. Until then, it’s me, my former programming brain that keeps expecting SQL logic, and a whole lot of determination.
The silver lining? I’m getting faster at this. Almost all our existing products are back up and running, and I’m already planning how to showcase new pieces as Rex finishes them.
What This Means for You
More new products: Without the constant website emergencies, I can focus on photographing and listing Rex’s latest creations. There’s some amazing work coming out of the shop that deserves to be seen.
Blog posts might be a bit sporadic: My days are currently split between coding and everything else that keeps Sarkanys Rising running. But I’m going to push Rex harder to share more “day in the workshop” stories because, honestly, his are way more interesting than “Dawn fought with WordPress again.”
Things will keep moving around: As I figure out what works best, you might notice changes. That’s me making improvements, not breaking things (well, mostly).
The Real Talk
My back hurts from hunching over the computer, I dream in CSS code, and sometimes I miss the straightforward logic of databases. But every time I see one of Rex’s pieces — like that walnut pen he spent three hours perfecting yesterday — I remember why this matters.
We’ve got beautiful work that deserves to be shared with people who’ll treasure it. If that means learning WordPress the hard way while applying for grants daily, then that’s what we’ll do.
Until Next Time
Thanks for your patience while I wrangle this website into submission. Keep an eye out for new pieces (they’re coming!), and as always, we’re here if you have questions or just want to chat about wood, resin, or the joys of small business website management.
Now, back to figuring out why my shopping cart keeps disappearing…
— Dawn
P.S. Rex wants everyone to know that while I’m wrestling with pixels, he’s still turning wood into magic. The workshop never stops, even when the website throws tantrums.
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When Lightning Meets Cherry Wood: The Story Behind Our Most Enchanted Pieces
Sometimes the most beautiful pieces are born from nature’s most dramatic moments.
Back in 2021, I thought I had a friend in New York who shared my beliefs about wood having spirit — how it connects not just to the people who will eventually own a piece, but also to the woodworker who brings it to life. Rex has always worked with this understanding too, respecting the energy that lives within each piece of timber.
When lightning strikes a tree, it leaves something behind. Not just the obvious scars and splits, but energy — both in the physical sense and in ways that speak to those of us who understand the deeper connections between nature and craft. So when this woman told me her cherry tree had been struck by lightning, I knew we had to work with that wood.
The Journey from Lightning Strike to Art
I asked if we could have some of the wood, offering to pay shipping and create anything she wanted from one of the pieces. The wood had already been cut by the time we got involved, so we couldn’t control the way it was sectioned or prevent some cracking — but we still ended up with three large, beautiful pieces that held stories in every grain line.
True to our word, we crafted a bowl for her from a half log. Rex used electrical tools to rough out the shape, but finished it entirely by hand — because that’s how you honor wood like this. We shipped it to her in 2023, and I kept one log while Rex claimed the other.

Handcrafted wooden bowl made from lightning-struck cherry wood, showing rich natural grain patterns and smooth finish, photographed against white fabric background I chose the piece with the largest split, knowing Dawn’s resin artistry could transform those lightning channels into something magical. We cut it into rounds ranging from 1 to 5 inches thick, and earlier this year, Dawn worked her magic with resin pours on three of the thickest rounds.
Where Lightning Traveled: The Sacred “T”
Here’s something remarkable about lightning-struck wood that most people don’t know — sometimes you can see exactly where the lightning traveled through the tree. In many of our pieces, you’ll notice a distinctive “T” shape in the wood grain or resin channels. That’s the lightning’s path, preserved forever in the timber like nature’s own signature.
These “T” marks aren’t flaws — they’re proof of the wood’s journey, evidence of the moment when sky met earth and left something extraordinary behind.
The Pieces That Emerged
What we’ve created from this lightning-struck cherry tells the story of transformation:

Lightning-struck cherry wood slice with vibrant rainbow resin inlay filling natural cracks, displaying brilliant blues, reds, and yellows against warm wood grain 
Interior 
Handcrafted mortar and pestle set made from lightning-struck cherry wood with green resin accents, showing functional artistry and smooth craftsmanship perfect for kitchen or altar use 
Interior 
Lightning-struck cherry bowl with green and blue resin inlay, showing smooth interior finish and how resin transforms natural wood splits into artistic features 
Interior 
Lightning-struck cherry wood bowl with dark purple resin lightning channel running through center, showcasing the natural T-shaped lightning path preserved in the finished piece 
Interior The Lavender Dream — A bowl where soft purple resin flows through the lightning’s path like captured twilight. The resin doesn’t hide the wood’s trauma; it celebrates it, turning scars into something beautiful.
Moss Green Mortar & Pestle — Functional art that brings the energy of that lightning strike into kitchen rituals. The green resin reminds you of forest floors and growing things, even as you’re grinding spices or mixing herbs.
Rainbow Revelations — Two bowls where Dawn’s resin work captures entire spectrums of color within the wood’s natural splits. Each one is a meditation on how broken things can become more beautiful than they were before.
Every piece is small but mighty — because sometimes the most powerful energy comes in compact packages.
The Deeper Connection
As someone who follows the Wiccan path, I believe in the spirit of wood being connected to everyone who touches it — from the tree’s original home to the hands that will eventually use these pieces daily. Lightning-struck wood carries extra significance because it’s been touched by one of nature’s most powerful forces.
Rex and I both approach our craft with this reverence. When we work with lightning-struck wood, we’re not just creating functional art — we’re preserving a moment when the universe showed its power and left us a gift to share.
What’s Still to Come
We still have several rounds waiting for inspiration, and Rex hasn’t even started on his log yet. The beauty of working with wood like this is that each piece tells you what it wants to become. You can’t force it, can’t rush it — you have to listen.



Whether someone wants a custom piece for their altar, their kitchen, or simply to bring more natural beauty into their home, we’re here to help that wood find its purpose. Each piece we create becomes part of a larger story — the tree’s story, the lightning’s story, our story as craftspeople, and ultimately, your story as the person who welcomes it into their life.
The Blessing Forward
May the god of your choosing bless you, and may everything you put into the world come back to you threefold. That’s not just a traditional blessing — it’s how we approach every piece we create. The energy we put into our work, the respect we show the materials, the care we take in every detail — all of that travels forward with each piece.
When you use one of our lightning-struck cherry pieces, you’re not just using a bowl or serving tray. You’re connecting with a moment of natural power, honoring the tree that gave its wood, and becoming part of a story that started with a flash of light in a New York sky.
Browse our current collection of lightning-struck cherry pieces with the links above or contact us about commissioning a custom piece that speaks to your spirit.