Edo cutting timber at the miter saw

About Edo

Woodworking isn't just a craft — it's a conversation with the material.

For over a decade, Edo has been shaping wood into furniture, sculpture, and functional art. Working from a workshop in the San Francisco Bay Area, every piece is an exercise in patience: reading the grain, respecting the knots and imperfections, and finding the form that lives inside each slab of wood.

A true jack of all trades, Edo moves comfortably between disciplines — from fine joinery to sculptural work, from live-edge slabs to precision cabinetry. Each piece carries the maker's touch, whether it's a dining table built to last generations or a hand-turned bowl from reclaimed timber.

Philosophy

In a world of mass production, there's something vital about an object made by hand. Edo believes furniture should carry the warmth of its making — the chisel marks, the hand-rubbed finish, the joints that will outlast generations. Every commission begins with a conversation about how the piece will live in your space, and ends with something that belongs nowhere else.

Materials

Edo works with a wide range of hardwoods and softwoods — walnut, oak, maple, cherry, and redwood among others — along with recycled and reclaimed wood whenever possible. Steel, stone, resin, and mixed media make appearances as accents, always in service of the wood's natural beauty.