started when I was ten years old.
One morning, I spotted an old washing machine sitting at the curb near my childhood home. I went back to grab some tools, removed the motor, and carried it into my father’s garage. There sat my grandfather’s old table saw — a solid machine with no motor, left unused after he passed away.
That afternoon, I fitted the washing machine motor onto that table saw and brought it back to life.
That was the moment everything began.
Through my younger years,
I worked in a variety of woodworking shops, learning every technique I could and absorbing everything the craft had to offer. I was driven by one goal: to become the best woodworker I could be.
Over time, I began building in my own shop — something I had always dreamed of. That freedom allowed my creativity to grow. Woodworking became more than a trade to me; it became a way to create works of art from raw material, shaped by skill, patience, and imagination.
In recent years,
after relocating to Florida, I spent time doing cabinet installations instead of building in my own shop. While the work kept me busy, it pulled me away from what I truly loved — designing and creating original pieces from the ground up.
Now, after completing my new shop, I’ve returned fully to my passion.
Today, my work is guided by thoughtful design, careful craftsmanship, and an artistic approach to every piece. I use proven woodworking methods and proper joinery that many mass-production companies have left behind. I don’t rush the process, and I don’t take shortcuts.
Each project is an opportunity to create something that is both functional and expressive — something meant to be used every day and appreciated as art.
If my name is on it, it reflects who I am and how I work.