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Custom cabinetmaker making furniture for people who want to top the Joneses.


Scott Johnston got his start as a custom furniture maker more than 20 years ago, building simple pieces out of 2-by-4s and selling them at swap meets swap meet
n.
An informal gathering for the barter or sale of used articles or handicrafts.
 on the weekends.

He didn't have a garage at the time, so he had to craft his pieces in a spare bedroom of his apartment. "The furniture wasn't much to look at. but I can tell you that for people starting out it was affordable," he said.

Today, the pine lumber lumber, term for timber that has been cut into boards for use as a building material. The major steps in producing lumber involve logging (the felling and preparation of timber for shipment to sawmills), sawing the logs into boards, grading the boards according to  Johnston used in his early offerings has given way to ribbon mahogany mahogany, common name for the Meliaceae, a widely distributed family of chiefly tropical shrubs and trees, often having scented wood. The valuable hardwood called mahogany is obtained from many members of the family; in America and Europe it is imported for  and birds-eye maple. The crude construction has been replaced by curved drawer A person who orders a bank to withdraw money from an account to pay a designated person a specific sum according to the term of a bill, a check, or a draft. An individual who writes and signs a Commercial Paper, thereby becoming obligated under its terms.  fronts, marble tops and fluted columns.

And instead of selling items for several bucks at a swap meet, a one-of-a-kind creation by Johnston and his partner Marie-Michelle can command as much as $35,000.

With the economy in hyper A Greek work meaning "above" or "more than." It is used as a prefix to technical concepts and products to convey a more advanced or more automatic capability.  drive, the Wood Extension has found a profitable niche in catering to those looking to up the Joneses. The company's specialty is signed and dated furniture that can't be found in a showroom and is tailored to fit the personality and home of each client.

"Our expertise is asking the right questions, so we can reach inside and find out what people really want," said Johnston.

Talk about good timing - demand for custom furniture has soared in recent years, particularly for woodworkers who do high-end pieces.

"Some people just want something no one else has, sort of the snob appeal snob appeal
n.
Qualities that seem to substantiate social or intellectual pretensions.
," said Helen Kuhl, editor of Custom Woodworking Business. "Or on a more practical side, a person may want a piece of furniture that does specific things, like store their collection of CDs or act as an entertainment center. And then some people just appreciate really fine things."

Paul Verhoeven, the director of "RoboCop" and "Total Recall," is enlisting Johnston and Marie to craft an entertainment center that will house a stereo See stereophonic.  system, as well as 1,300 CDs. The equipment and discs will be hidden behind oak doors and antique antique. The term has been used collectively to designate classical Greek and Roman works of art, particularly sculptures; as an adjective to indicate an object, a period, or a style of ancient or early times; and as a noun, for objects of art, furniture, rugs,  brass grillwork grill·work  
n.
Material formed into grilles or a grille.

Noun 1. grillwork - mesh netting made of wires
wirework
.

Wood Extension also has more modest orders, including a set of handmade hand·made  
adj.
Made or prepared by hand rather than by machine.


handmade
Adjective

made by hand, not by machine

Adj. 1.
 chopsticks a woman is giving to her husband-to-be. The creations sell from anywhere from $75 for the custom chopsticks to $35,000 for Verhoeven's entertainment center. Most of the work goes for $3,500 to $12,000, said

Marie-Michelle (who doesn't use her last name).

"Everyone has what they want to spend in their head, and you have to respect that, whether a client makes $40,000, $400,000 or $4 million," said Marie, who teamed up with Johnston 14 years ago and helps design and build the furniture.

The process usually begins with visiting the client's home and asking lots of questions.

"We don't just build the furniture. We want to know where you're going to put it and what you'll be using it for," said Johnston. "You have to understand the function of a piece before you design it."

People often have very specific ideas about what they want, and they will come to the interview armed with photos of features they want to see incorporated.

One of the biggest frustrations is dealing with interior designers who try to act as go-betweens (and who don't understand the nuances of furniture design). Often, the designer fails to ask how much a client is willing to spend.

Johnston and Marie-Michelle declined to reveal revenue figures for the privately held company privately held company

A firm whose shares are held within a relatively small circle of owners and are not traded publicly.
 but said business is increasing at a 5 percent to 7 percent annual clip. "A lot of furniture makers are great craftsmen but poor businessmen. Most of them go out of business after a couple of years," Marie-Michelle said.

The goal is to make potential customers aware of the products directly, so that Johnston and Marie-Michelle don't have to work through designers (who take as much as a 50 percent cut on each transaction).

"Our clients can save money by not paying a third party, and it gives us and our clients more creative control," said Johnston. "When people buy furniture, it's a very personal thing. But to help design a piece that is in their heart and soul, it's just aces."
COPYRIGHT 1999 CBJ, L.P.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1999, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:Wood Extension
Author:Woodard, Christopher
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Date:Aug 2, 1999
Words:687
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