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Vase in spalted maple and black walnut | Vases & Vessels by Patton Drive Woodworking. Item made of maple wood
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Vase in spalted maple and black walnut | Vases & Vessels by Patton Drive Woodworking. Item made of maple wood
Vase in spalted maple and black walnut | Vases & Vessels by Patton Drive Woodworking. Item made of maple wood
Vase in spalted maple and black walnut | Vases & Vessels by Patton Drive Woodworking. Item made of maple wood

Created and Sold by Patton Drive Woodworking

Patton Drive Woodworking

Vase in spalted maple and black walnut - Vases & Vessels

Price $95

In Stock Now

Shipping: USPS 7-10 days
Price $8 Shipping in the US, ask the creator about international shipping.
Estimated Arrival: December 28, 2024

DimensionsWeight
14H x 8W x 8D in
35.56H x 20.32W x 20.32D cm
0.45 kg
1 lb

Inspired by traditional vases, this laminated wooden vase includes spalted maple and black walnut. It was handcrafted at high speed on a lathe and sculpted to shape using hand tools.
Each vase comes with a glass insert for fresh or dry flowers.
11 inches high and 4 inches round
Sustainably sourced hardwood construction, beeswax finish and made to last a lifetime.
Every purchase plants a tree.

Item Vase in spalted maple and black walnut
As seen in Private Residence, Menomonee Falls, WI
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Patton Drive Woodworking
Meet the Creator
Wescover creator since 2021
When a chef and a designer met.

When Mike and Natalie Cooperman met at a holiday party in New York City in 2003, they probably had little idea that 18 years later they’d end up in Wisconsin, three kids deep, collaborating on wooden kitchen utensils, but here they
are.
Mike, a former chef, worked at fine restaurants like the The Modern at the MOMA and Le Bernardin, and Natalie designed textiles for the likes of the Gap, Corelle, and Martha Stewart.
Eventually, the growing Cooperman family packed up and moved out to Menomonee Falls, outside Milwaukee, and it was there that Mike began flexing his creative muscles in a different arena and took up woodworking, following in the footsteps of his grandfathers. He started with making cooking spoons and Natalie handled the hand-dipping—another natural step, considering her background as a designer. Originally these creations—with wood sourced locally—were meant purely for themselves, as they couldn’t find the products they wanted to use. But people sat up and took notice, and Patton Drive was born.