Home / Live-edge & epoxy Live-edge & epoxy

One slab.
One of one.

Single-slab live edges and epoxy river tables — statement pieces built around a board that only exists once. You pick the slab. We build the table nobody else will ever own.

The flagship

Where the wood does the talking

A live-edge table starts with a question most furniture never asks: which tree? We keep the raw edge of the slab exactly as it grew — every curve, crack, and burl — then flatten it dead level, fill the river with epoxy, and finish it to take real life. Nothing about it comes off a production line, because nothing about the slab ever happened twice.

These are the pieces people build a room around. They take longer, they cost more, and they're worth both.

Walnut river table Ocean blue pour · 84″ dining
Slabs in the rack Pick yours before we cut
Step one

Choosing your slab

You don't commit to a one-of-one table sight-unseen. Before any deposit, we pull slab options that fit your size and budget — walnut, oak, whatever the piece calls for — and you see them first. Photos if you're busy, or come to the shop and put your hand on the wood.

The slab you approve is the slab you get. Its edge, its grain, its character — locked in before a single cut. That's the whole point of a one-of-one.

The river

Pick your pour

The epoxy is where the piece gets personal. Tinted to your room, poured deep, sanded glass-smooth. These are the pours we run most — and if you have something else in mind, ask.

Ocean blue Deep teal Smoke black Clear Metallic Custom tint — just ask
Straight pricing

What these actually cost

A river table is a serious piece at a serious price, and you deserve the range up front — not after three sales calls.

Dining

River dining tables

Typically $3,000–$8,000+ depending on species, size, and the pour. Big slabs, deep rivers, and rare wood push the top of the range.

Coffee & console

Coffee tables & smaller pieces

River and live-edge coffee tables start around $1,200. Same slab, same pour, same build — sized for the living room instead of the dining room.

Every quote is exact once your slab is chosen: one number, one timeline, in writing. A 50% deposit reserves your slot and covers the slab and materials; the balance is due on delivery.

Why local matters

These pieces don't ship

A slab table can weigh a couple hundred pounds, and freight is where river tables go to die — cracked pours, chipped edges, crates dropped off a liftgate. We don't play that game. We build for Orange County homes and put the table in the room ourselves.

Built for this countyEvery table is commissioned for a local home — sized to your room, colored to your space, seen in person before you commit.
Delivered by the makerThe same hands that poured the river carry it in, level it, and set it exactly where it lives. No third-party crew.
No freight rouletteNo crate, no carrier claims, no "damaged on arrival." If it isn't right in your room, we make it right — we're twenty minutes away.
Recent slabs

Rivers we've poured

Commission yours
Walnut river dining table Ocean blue · seats 8
Live-edge console Single slab · clear pour
River coffee table Deep teal · walnut
Good questions

Asked before every build

How long does it take?

Six to ten weeks from deposit to delivery, depending on the piece and the queue. Epoxy cures on its own schedule and we don't rush it — a hurried pour is a ruined slab.

How do I care for it?

Like a table, not a museum piece. Every table leaves with a care guide, and if the finish ever dulls years down the road, bring it back for a refresh coat.

Can I see it mid-build?

Yes. You get progress photos at every stage, and shop visits are welcome — plenty of clients stop by to watch their pour go in.

Commissions open

Ready to pick your slab?

Two minutes on the form — rough size, a budget range, a photo of the room. We'll pull slab options and take it from there.

Get a quote