About ThawHome

A studio for tables planned around the room.

ThawHome designs epoxy and live-edge tables around room scale, wood character, resin direction, and the way the space is used.

A table should feel specified for the room it lives in, not dropped into it.

Studio belief

The room comes before the table.

A custom table is not only a surface. It sets the center of gravity for meals, meetings, work, and everyday movement through a room.

Room fit first

Dining rooms, offices, studios, and gathering spaces need different proportions, base presence, clearance, and visual weight.

Material judgment

Wood grain, slab movement, resin depth, edge profile, base style, and finish are reviewed as one composition.

Quote-first path

Custom and semi-custom tables are scoped before payment so dimensions, materials, destination, and project context stay aligned.

Material philosophy

Wood leads. Resin supports.

Epoxy should not make a table feel like a novelty object. Used with restraint, resin can add depth, quiet contrast, or a controlled river line while the wood remains the natural anchor of the piece.

Wood character

Natural grain, edge movement, tone, and slab scale set the foundation of the table.

Resin direction

Clear, dark, colored, river, reverse river, or subtle fill should support the wood and the room.

Base style

The base affects legroom, silhouette, table stability, and the visual weight of the finished piece.

Finish

Finish direction should match appearance, touch, care habits, and everyday use.

Process proof

A controlled path from slab to surface.

The making process is built around material judgment: wood selection, resin control, sanding, finishing, base fitting, and practical review before the table moves toward use.

Select for scale

A slab direction is reviewed for room fit, grain movement, edge character, color, and usable yield.

Control the pour

Porous edges, voids, mold work, resin depth, pigment load, bubbles, and cure behavior are managed deliberately.

Refine the surface

Flattening, sanding, edge shaping, and finish preparation bring wood and resin into one usable surface.

Fit the base

Base selection and alignment are checked for proportion, seating clearance, stability, and visual balance.

Review next steps

Surface quality, edge consistency, base alignment, packing needs, and delivery planning are reviewed by project.

Custom path

Quote-first, not checkout-first.

High-ticket custom furniture needs a calmer path than a product page with an immediate checkout button. For custom and semi-custom tables, final scope depends on dimensions, material direction, base style, finish, destination, and project requirements.

The quote step keeps those details visible before payment.

Ownership

Made to be lived with, not treated as fragile art.

A custom table should feel practical in the room it serves. Care guidance is part of the planning process, especially for large solid wood slabs and visible resin surfaces.

Daily use

A finished wood and epoxy table should support normal dining, meetings, writing, and everyday living with care.

Read the care guide

Room stability

Indoor humidity, sunlight, heat, and cleaning habits all affect how solid wood and resin age in place.

Read the care guide

Finish expectations

Matte, satin, and gloss surfaces need different expectations for reflections, fingerprints, and maintenance.

Read the care guide

A few careful boundaries keep the story honest.

The About page should build trust without inventing certifications, origin stories, lead times, warranties, or environmental claims that have not been verified.

About the way we describe custom tables

We avoid broad environmental claims unless they are supported by verified sourcing, material, or certification details. The safer focus is natural wood character, made-to-order planning, material judgment, and long-term ownership expectations.

No natural slab or resin pour can be duplicated exactly. Grain, edge movement, resin flow, color depth, and scale can be guided, but each finished piece has its own material character.

Yes, when resin direction is restrained and the wood remains the anchor. Clear, dark, neutral, or subtle resin choices can support a quiet room better than highly saturated color effects.

Start with table type, approximate size, room use, seating count, wood direction, resin color direction, destination, and any reference image that feels close.

Start your table plan

Begin with the room, then shape the table.

Share the practical context first. The table direction can be refined once scale, material character, daily use, and quote scope are clear.