Georgia’s Gorilla Golf tourney to support Dian Fossey fund’s conservation efforts

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On September 27, Dark Horse Woodworks’ Chris Dehmer is participating in the 6th Annual Gorilla Golf tournament in Atlanta, which raises funds to help gorillas in the wild.

The tournament is organized by Ape Conservation Effort (APE), a Georgia non-profit comprised of volunteer members who share a passion for animals and a commitment to saving the great apes (bonobos, chimpanzees, gorillas, and orangutans).

Want to make a donation? Here’s a note from Chris:

Dear friends of Dark Horse:

I’m excited to be golfing in this year’s Gorilla Golf Tournament; playing involves raising a minimum of $500 for this great cause, and I wanted to share info on the event in case this is a cause you feel strongly about, too.

100% of the proceeds raised will benefit the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund International (DFGFI), headquartered in Atlanta. Gorillas in the wild are critically endangered and desperately need your help; there are fewer than 1,000 mountain gorillas left in the world.

For more than 45 years, DFGFI has been dedicated to gorilla conservation through daily protection, anti-poaching efforts, research, education and helping neighboring communities. Your contribution will make a difference: Extinction is forever, but endangered means there is still time.

Want to help me raise money for this great cause?

If you’d like to be a sponsor, you can make a contribution online or via mail.

  • Online: Visit the “sponsor a golfer” page on the APE website and look for my name.
  • Mail: Make checks payable to Ape Conservation Effort (please be sure to include my name on the memo line). Send your donation to:

Ape Conservation Effort

800 Cherokee Avenue, SE

Atlanta, GA  30315

Thanks for considering this great opportunity to support DFGFI, and for helping Ape Conservation Effort raise funds and awareness to save this majestic animal.

~ Chris, Dark Horse Woodworks

Dark Horse wins 5 Awards from the Cabinet Makers Association

BalmoralBarViewIn our relatively short history – Dark Horse was created in 2007 – we’ve had a lot of good news come down the pike.

If you follow our blog, you know that our work has ended up in Dwell magazine a few times; that homes we’ve worked on have been featured on Modern Atlanta tours; and that a home we worked on years ago was featured in the New York Times a few months back.

But there’s nothing quite like being singled out by our peers across the United States and Canada with Cabinet Makers Association (CMA) awards. We’ve been fortunate to win Wood Diamond awards every year since we joined; these honors means so much because we know that our fellow cabinet makers truly understand the time and attention to detail that goes into every one of our projects.

So you can imagine how excited we were when the CMA recognized Dark Horse with four first-place Wood Diamond awards and one third-place award at the CMA awards ceremony in Atlanta last week!

So what is a Wood Diamond Award? 

The awards recognize cabinetry companies of all sizes in the United States and Canada for work submitted in 38 categories. This year the CMA added a third project budget classification to further narrow down the submissions by dollar amount. CMA members can now submit projects that fall into three project budget categories: Projects Under $25,000; $25,000 – $50,000 projects; and projects costing more than $50,000.

All judging is done by CMA members who did not submit any projects for consideration.

Hats off to our visionary clients and partners

Without design-savvy clients, designers, architects and all of the other talented people we partner with on projects, Dark Horse would not have award-worthy work, so we have to share our thanks for this year’s Wood Diamond projects; below are a few details about the work that was recognized.

The Balmoral project

First place, Euro Kitchen under $25,000 category

For the Balmoral project, we created a sleek kitchen featuring a bar area with suspended cabinetry above it. The kitchen island incorporates open, lighted wine storage, and we also created a hidden pantry.

Balmoral house

Read more about the Balmoral project.

The Wesley bar

First place, Residential Bar (European) under $25,000 

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Our assignment with the Wesley project was to create an elaborate bar inspired by a bar in a Los Angeles hotel that the homeowner liked; while we might have enjoyed a field trip to check out the LA bar in person, we took the photos provided by the homeowner and ran with those as inspiration.

As you’ll see in the photos, we did grain-matching throughout the bar — a process that is always complex but gratifying when the work is complete.

Read more about the Wesley bar.

The Olympic house 

First place, European Library under $25,000

The Olympic home, designed by Lightroom Inc. (architecture) and Suzanne Seymour Interior Design, is a beautiful three-level modern home with detached garage and a separate studio apartment.

Olympic library

The library features floating stained walnut veneer shelving, held up by steel supports hidden behind the sheetrock; each shelf is rated to hold 1,300 pounds, so the clients can bring on their heaviest books and treasures!

Third place, European kitchen under $25,000

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The Olympic kitchen features custom gloss-white cabinetry and Thermador appliances. Unlike most kitchens we work on, we had to finish the tops of the cabinetry due to the unique design of this home, which is open from the main floor to the rooftop terrace 30 feet up.

On this solid walnut island with waterfall edges, the grain is matched from the sides to the top.

Read more about the Olympic project.

The Stonehaven project

First place, Mudroom under $25,000

In the mudroom of this home, we were asked to incorporate four lockers – one for each family member – and then use the remaining wall space for cabinets to store other household items. The exterior of the cabinets in the mudroom were painted after installation.

 

Read more about the Stonehaven project. 

Sometimes, there’s no need to come up with new ways to say what’s true, so I’m going to end with what I said when we won Wood Diamond awards for the first time several years ago: We’re proud to have been recognized, but we’re equally grateful to our clients. Without people who value craftsmanship enough to give their business to Dark Horse instead of making a visit to the instant-gratification furniture showrooms and discounters, we wouldn’t have a livelihood, much less an award.

Thank you.

~ Chris and the Dark Horse team

Read more about the Awards and our fellow CMA member companies who were recognized for their fine work. 

What wood it be? A spalted table tale

A unique piece of Ramon wood — or Breadnut, depending on your preference — had been sitting in the shop for 18 months waiting for just the right client when we received an invitation to the 11th CHRIStal Ball, which benefits CHRIS Kids, a great organization in Atlanta with the mission to “heal children, strengthen families and build community.”

The year before,  I had created a table to donate for a CHRIS Kids fundraiser, and I decided to take this unusual piece of wood and make another table to benefit this organization I admire so much.

For those who like backstories, here’s the history and a few craftsmanship details about this table.

The next time I walked into the shop and spotted this board, I had a quick flash of inspiration: I’d make a table with waterfall edges to donate for the auction. The waterfall edge  is made by cutting a wedge out of the back of the piece and folding the table down so that the grain runs continuously over the joint. Both ends of the table have this feature.

The Breadnut tree is found widely in second-growth Central American tropical rain forests, where its presence in deep forests is considered evidence of pre-Colombian Mayan tree cultivation. The Mayans are thought to have preserved the seeds in underground chambers, probably as insurance against famine. Today, the sweet, succulent fruits are generally roasted and used to make a coffee-like drink.

Based on the amount of insect damage and spalting in this piece of Breadnut, the log that it came from had likely lain on the forest floor for quite some time before being harvested.

“Spalting” is a by-product of the rotting process. When the temperature and humidity are right, spalting can cause many different and beautiful patterns in rotting wood. The unusual coloration is due to chemically induced reactions between the wood, fungi and insect deposits, which often result in black, pink, gray and multicolored streaks in the wood.

One end of the slab had rotted away, but I wanted to incorporate it into the design of the piece instead of cutting that piece off.  To harden this section and fill in the areas that had insect damage, we coated the entire piece with multiple applications of epoxy.

The slow-setting epoxy absorbed into these soft areas as well as the voids created by the insect damage. We then sanded off the epoxy, and applied three coats of lacquer. Once cured, the lacquer was wet-sanded. Then we hand-rubbed the lacquer with pumice and rottenstone. The final step was applying a few coats of paste wax.

It was satisfying to take such a cool piece of wood that I had no real plan in mind for and end up with a table I was pleased with and could offer up for a good cause.

~Chris Dehmer

A CHRISKids holiday

Happy new year!

We hope our clients and friends are enjoying a great 2015 so far.

I want to give a belated shout-out to our team, friends and clients for their generosity back in December: At the end of our annual holiday party, we were grateful to find that we had collected about 100 toys – everything from dolls to bicycles – to donate to the children served by CHRISKids, a wonderful Atlanta nonprofit whose mission is “to heal children, strengthen families and build community.”

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CHRISKids provides children, adults and families with high-quality, trauma-informed behavioral health services and support systems, and I’m so grateful for all that they do. It made our holidays much brighter to be able to help make the holidays special for the kids of CHRISKids.

(And no, as big an honor as it would be to have such a great organization named after me, “CHRIS” stands for Creativity, Honor, Respect, Integrity and Safety.)

If you’re ever looking for a great organization to support, check out the CHRISKids website.

~Chris Dehmer