Dark Horse featured in the New York Times

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We’re happy to announce that our work debuted in the New York Times today!

The Friar Tuck house, a beautiful modern home renovation we worked on a few years back, is on the market, and the Times chose to feature it in its “What You Get” real estate series. Each story in the series features three properties of varying styles in different areas of the country that are for sale in the same price range.

In the story published today, $1,800,000 Homes in Kentucky, Atlanta and New Mexico,” we were called out for the award-winning kitchen cabinetry in the home:

The kitchen has quartz countertops, a 16-foot-long island and stainless-steel appliances. The room’s rift-sawn oak cabinets have a single continuous grain across the doors. The work of Dark Horse Woodworks of Atlanta, the cabinets received an award from the Cabinet Makers Association. Off the kitchen, there’s a bar designed to be handy to the pool through sliding glass doors. Additionally, there’s a library, set off with pocket doors.

We created extensive cabinetry throughout the Friar Tuck home, including the bar referenced in the excerpt above, and the article called out some of that work as well (though without crediting Dark Horse specifically – hey, you can’t win ‘em all):

The master bedroom is outfitted with extensive ebony cabinetry, including a television cabinet above a gas fireplace and dressers in a closet. The bathroom has a vanity with double sinks and a quartz countertop, as well as a frameless glass shower. 

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We hope you’ll check out the article as well as the slide show (just click past the photos of the first home to get to the Atlanta house photos). The photos include our kitchen cabinetry, the bar, and the shelving and a TV enclosure we built for the fireplace/living area.

Interested in seeing the rest of the Dark Horse creations not pictured in the NYT slide show? Check out our own coverage of the Friar Tuck project.

Links, all in one spot: 

Our favorite kind of deja vu

Dark Horse Woodworks has just been honored for a third time with Wood Diamond awards from the Cabinet Makers Association.

We’ll post more soon about the specific projects and their award-winning ins and outs, but for now, here are the Dark Horse awards in the 2015 competition; as always, we are especially honored to be recognized by our peers.

Entertainment Center, Face Frame, <$25K

First Place: Dark Horse Woodworks (Atlanta, GA)

doncaster

Library, European, <$25K

First Place: Dark Horse Woodworks (Atlanta, GA)

Kitchen, European, <$25K

Second Place: Dark Horse Woodworks (Atlanta, GA)

Kitchen, European, >$25K

Honorable Mention: Dark Horse Woodworks (Atlanta, GA)

Honorable Mention: Dark Horse Woodworks (Atlanta, GA)

~ Chris Dehmer

Kudos from our peers: Cabinet Makers Awards

Dark Horse joined the Cabinet Makers Association just a couple of years ago, and I couldn’t be more pleased to have had our work recognized in both of the CMA Wood Diamond Awards competitions that have taken place since then.

This year, the CMA awarded Dark Horse first place in the competition for European-style entertainment centers under $25K and an Honorable Mention in the competition for European-style kitchens over $25K.

It was especially gratifying to win first-place for the entertainment center we built as part of the Brandon Mill project. For this piece, our clients gave us a drawing and said, “This is what we want.”

Then life intervened, and my mom got very sick. My team rallied around and did the build-out without me, so this project will always remind me of her and of the great feeling that came from knowing that my team could and would step up for me.

Our clients were very happy with the final result, so we were, too. It’s nice to be able to make someone’s sketched-out dream come true.

Our honorable mention award came for the kitchen in the Oakview home, a project that has gotten a lot of attention, with the most high-profile kudos coming from Dwell magazine. We’ve mentioned this project on the blog several times, as Dwell continues to highlight different aspects of the great design and execution of this very cool home.

On a personal note, the thing I loved most about the Oakview project was getting the opportunity to work with mahogany that was recovered from the hulls of PT boats from World War II (which would have been destroyed otherwise).  It was very cool to work with wood that has such a rich history; we were able to use it throughout the house, not just in the kitchen that was recognized by the CMA.

Here’s a bit more detail on the project pulled from our CMA awards entry:

“We were lucky enough to obtain some 1/8″ thick mahogany veneer that was originally harvested by the United States Military during WWII for the production of PT Boat hulls. This project also marked our first foray into using steel as a veneer.

“Being able to turn this veneer that was originally intended to be used as a PT Boat hull into a dream kitchen was an honor.

“This project was all about grain matching cabinets and unique veneer panels. Limited pulls were requested so we utilized push to open hardware and and finger pulls in most cabinets.”

On a big-picture level, I think that everything I said on the blog about last year’s CMA awards still holds true. So I’ll pull from that post:

At Dark Horse, we’re rewarded for our work all the time, in a couple of ways. First and foremost, we make a living through the projects we build, which is no small thing, of course.

Second – and I think the Dark Horse staff would agree with me on this – we’re rewarded by the satisfaction we have at the end of a project. You can’t beat the feeling you get from seeing an idea transformed into a tangible piece of furniture or set of cabinetry. It’s doubly satisfying for us because we pride ourselves on the details – including a lot of the things the new owner will never notice.

But it’s also pretty exciting when we’re rewarded by being singled out by our peers. 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