Dinning room table fabricated in steel. This 6′ diameter dinning table has a 36″ lazy Susan in the center with an over sized single piece glass top. Powder coated satin black.

The “George” dinning table was inspired by a sculpture installation of mine on the property that consisted of two of these spikes in rusted steel. The table uses sections of the spike design as the body. All constructed in stainless steel with a granite top. Table top measures 3′ x 9′

Coffee Tables have always been one of my favorite pieces of furniture. During the first few years building and running a studio, they were the life blood of my existence. The coffee table is the main piece of furniture in almost every home. True conversation starters. I believe they should be a statement piece. A focal point for the room. These early works were so much fun to design and build.

DPR Construction Conference Table. 10′ x 5′ The idea for the table was to highlight common construction materials. With a collection of woods, rocks, gravel, plywood, nuts, bolts and screws. The table top is wrapped in an aluminum band as a boarder, then the materials were incased in 39 gallons of resin. The stainless steel used for the pattern that separates the different sections of the top, is based off of a center focus design pattern. The base was shaped to follow the contour of the top and then patinaed with rust and Japanese brown color.

The Ruby Enclosure and end table, both 40″ x 16″ x 16″ The “Ruby” as these red enclosures and end tables came to be known, were designed and sold during my years working in Los Angeles. With a love of mid century modern as the inspiration, I wanted to reflect a more powerful, almost gothic, darker tone to what I would consider a strong, simple statement piece. The red stained glass that was used for the enclosure door, and the 100 year old ruby glass tiles used on the end tables which once lived in the lobby of a bank in Chicago, were just magnificent. Once I had those, everything fell into place.