In the workshop: the craft of bespoke woodworking
A walk among the benches of our master carpenters, where drawing becomes matter and every joint tells sixty years of craft.
There is a precise sound that opens every day in our Jesolo workshops: the plane meeting the wood. Trade fairs, museums and bespoke interiors all pass through here, yet the principle has been unchanged since 1959 — quality is built by hand, one piece at a time.
Every project is born twice: first on the technical drawing, then at the bench. Our master carpenters translate construction details into joints, fittings and finishes that must withstand the journey, the assembly and the close gaze of the public.
The choice of material is the first design act. Species, grain and stability are assessed against the destination: a temporary museum fit-out asks for lightness and reversibility; a contract interior asks for durability and an impeccable finish.
Pre-assembly: rehearsing before departure
Before any element leaves Jesolo, the entire structure is assembled in the workshop. This is where we verify tolerances, alignments and light: a dress rehearsal that reduces surprises on site and shortens installation times, often in historic, constrained spaces.
“Wood forgives little: either the detail is right, or it isn't. That is why we rehearse everything before we leave.”
When the last finish is dry, the piece is dismantled, packed and handed to our logistics. Our own staff and vehicles accompany the work to its destination — in Italy or abroad — so the hand that built it is the hand that installs it.
It is a method that seeks no shortcuts. Yet it is exactly what lets an idea become a space that leaves a mark.