CUSTOMER TESTIMONIALS
"It's a real privilege for us to have the beautiful piece you made for us. It's truly a work of art—the beauty of nature combined with the loving work that went into it resulted in a piece that I know will bring us pleasure for years to come. Thank you.
—Lynn Aaberg
"Charlie just loves your cabinets. I have walked into our living room and caught him just sitting there, gazing at that mantle.
—Blaire Stephens
"We're excited to have another Mark Meyer piece in our new home. We've certainly enjoyed the work you have done for us in the past.
—Timothy Allen
"We're still enjoying the cabinets you made for us, after all these years. They're beautiful.
—Warren Sparks
"It looks like it just grew there.
—Amanda Punton
"I love my cabinet! It's exactly what I wanted, and nobody else in the whole world has one just like it! It's totally unique.
—Tasha Galardi
Photo credit: Gary Tarlton
Mark Meyer applies a natural, sculptural sensitivity to his work, which ranges from custom furniture to kitchen cabinets.
Everything he does is custom, and most of his work emphasizes traditional joinery and Oregon hardwoods all combined in clean designs that emphasize the natural beauty of the materials. Sometimes he uses live edges and branches to bring even more of the natural wood into play.
“I occasionally indulge in my favorite style, which is to use natural shapes and forms (branches and slabs with their live edges) in conjunction with milled lumber to create organic looking pieces, which one customer refers to as my ‘hobbit-hole’ furniture,” he says.
While most people are familiar with live-edge table tops, Meyer brings this organic touch to even kitchen cabinetry, such as a kitchen sink cabinet with a flowing natural wood back splash.
Based in Corvallis, Oregon, Meyer tries to use wood that is native to the Willamette Valley region. That includes broad-leafed maple, with oak, chinquapin, western cherry, ash, alder, and walnut. But he’s also experimented with recycled and found wood, depending on the project. He used redwood from salvaged barrel staves of wine vats to make seven doors and 53 windows for a renovated farmhouse.
Everything he does is custom, and most of his work emphasizes traditional joinery and Oregon hardwoods all combined in clean designs that emphasize the natural beauty of the materials. Sometimes he uses live edges and branches to bring even more of the natural wood into play.
“I occasionally indulge in my favorite style, which is to use natural shapes and forms (branches and slabs with their live edges) in conjunction with milled lumber to create organic looking pieces, which one customer refers to as my ‘hobbit-hole’ furniture,” he says.
While most people are familiar with live-edge table tops, Meyer brings this organic touch to even kitchen cabinetry, such as a kitchen sink cabinet with a flowing natural wood back splash.
Based in Corvallis, Oregon, Meyer tries to use wood that is native to the Willamette Valley region. That includes broad-leafed maple, with oak, chinquapin, western cherry, ash, alder, and walnut. But he’s also experimented with recycled and found wood, depending on the project. He used redwood from salvaged barrel staves of wine vats to make seven doors and 53 windows for a renovated farmhouse.