Taylor Lamoureaux
I am a furniture maker working out of a 1,300-square-foot studio in Richmond, California. My work centers on locally sourced hardwoods — primarily Claro walnut milled from the North Sacramento Valley — and traditional joinery methods executed by hand. I am drawn to pieces that are precise but not cold, and to designs that carry the mark of the material as much as the maker.
I came to woodworking through Robert Beauchamp, a master furniture maker based in Zamora, California, under whose tutelage I spent five years developing my craft. Working alongside him I learned advanced joinery, veneering, finishing, and the discipline of managing complex projects from design through delivery. I established my own independent practice in November 2023.
Before woodworking, I studied Linguistics at the University of California, Davis, and spent a period teaching English abroad. I continue to work in reforestation through Scion Forestry Services, climbing coniferous trees and collecting seed for reforestation contracts across the Western United States. The connection between the forest and the furniture shop is not incidental — it informs how I think about wood, where it comes from, and what it is owed.
My current focus is on developing a recognizable aesthetic: curved forms, radially veneered surfaces, and a restrained use of detail that I want clients to be able to identify as mine. I take commissions for furniture built to order, and I teach private woodworking lessons for students at all levels.