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Custom Made in Dallas

Dallas: Land of big hair, fancy cars, business tycoons, and old-world craftsmen? Who knew that our city had nurtured some of the most accomplished craftsmen and artisans in the world? Thanks in part to Dallas clients and designers who act as modern-day Medicis, a subterranean class of glassmakers, stonecutters, woodworkers, muralists, and textile makers are preserving the tradition of crafting by hand.
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Portrait Photography by Elizabeth Lavin, Additional Reporting by Jenny Block, Tiffany Glick, and Hays Sibley 

Dallas: Land of big hair, fancy cars, business tycoons, and old-world craftsmen? Who knew that our city had nurtured some of the most accomplished craftsmen and artisans in the world? Thanks in part to Dallas clients and designers who act as modern-day Medicis, a subterranean class of glassmakers, stonecutters, woodworkers, muralists, and textile makers are preserving the tradition of crafting by hand.

Upholstery, Trim, Textiles, Leather

Ellen Holt, Passementerie maker

Ellen Holt, Ellen S. Holt Inc.
Passementerie maker
214-741-1804
1013 Slocum St.

“I’m a weaver in my heart of hearts,” says Ellen Holt, whose 24-year-old company hand-weaves custom tassels and trimmings, ranging from a simple silk cord to the most elaborate combination of cording, tassels, and fringe imaginable. Some of the finest houses in the country have commissioned her work, but she’s best known for her reproductions of historic passementerie. She has created custom tassels for the Abraham Lincoln home in Springfield, Ill., and trimmings and tassels for Monticello, the home of Thomas Jefferson. Holt is one of a dying breed—only one other company in the United States is skilled enough to produce such fine, historic passementerie. Because her designs are as enduring as they are intricate and beautiful, her handwork easily lends itself to other uses, such as a collection of footstools detailed with exclusively designed trimmings, which she will launch this spring.

Marcelena Recatune, Larru Leathers Inc.
Custom leather
214-760-7003
170 Leslie St.

Skilled leather worker Marcelena Recatune can create anything from leather including wall panels, tabletops, desk pads, leather invitations, evening and travel bags, books, and journals. Recatune hand colors, paints, dyes, braids, stitches, and tools leather for clients throughout the country. Her collection of antique stamps, some dating back to the 1700s, is extraordinary and allows her to tool 23-karat gold onto leather, a dying art. Some of her other services include leather restoration, working with antiques owned by private clients and with furniture manufacturers directly. Recatune’s leathers are hand-rubbed and hand-layered to create rich and sumptuous colors that age into a beautiful patina. Recatune and her team recently upholstered a 24-by-30-foot room all in hand-tooled, hand-dyed leather, an impressive feat considering that each 3/4-by-1/2-inch gilt stamping had to be lined up perfectly.

Donna Burley, Straight Stitch
Custom bedding and window treatments
972-416-6124
2910 Belmeade Dr., Ste. 105, Carrollton
To the Trade

When she started her custom bedding and window treatments company 25 years ago, Donna Burley was working out of her apartment. Now she’s one of the most sought after seamstresses in Dallas, specializing in intricate designs and often working with fine or antique textiles. Depending on fabric and design, Burley and her skilled staff often sew detail work and finish-out by hand. And she has already achieved her personal goal of doing a room in the White House, taking the measurements of the master suite herself and installing traditional valances with draperies and sheers per the designer’s sketches. “Draperies are a fashion thing,” she says. “Some designs are timeless, but for the most part it is always changing.” She has projects from New York to California and recently completed a project on a private island in the Caribbean.

Julie Cohn, Surface designer

Julie Cohn
Surface designer for wall coverings, rugs, and carpet
214-354-1627
www.juliecohndesign.com

Julie Cohn’s designs for rugs, wall coverings, carpet, and room screens are clean and contemporary, influenced by her love of Danish Modern and Asian patterns. Her designs are created using a stylus and tablet connected to the computer, which result in exquisite scale renderings for each project, all works of art. Although much of her work is done for hotels nationally, Cohn also works with private clients and designers on request. Her collection of rugs, woven in the ancient Tibetan tradition, is produced and sold through Tufenkian and Surya Rugs.

George Cameron Nash and Jesus Marroquin, Cameron Collection
Custom furniture and upholstery
214-752-4421
4819 Reading St.
To the Trade

“We like to show the details that have been lost over the years. It’s what we call the bells, buttons, and whistles,” says showroom owner George Cameron Nash, whose custom upholstery collection has been under the direction of Jesus Marroquin for 19 years. But before Marroquin gets started with the painstaking details on a piece’s exterior, dozens of skilled upholsters may touch it, crafting it entirely by hand and focusing on the quality inside, including framework, springing, webbing, preliminary upholstery, secondary upholstery, inner and outer linings, skirting, and cushions. Only then does Marroquin’s exquisite detail work begin. Each piece is given almost microscopic attention and is precisely stitched. “It’s more of a laboratory than a studio,” Nash says. With each measurement and stitch meticulously scrutinized, every seam, every pleat, every skirt will lay exactly as it should.

Casa Colonial, Rita Vasquez
Bedding, decorative pillows, etc.
214-941-8700 
1322 N. Peak St.

Childress Fabrics/The Fabric Factory, Mike Childress
Custom draperies, table
toppers, and furniture
469-633-1180/972-720-1400
2517 Ferris St.
8760 7th St., Frisco
12330 Inwood Rd. (Fabric Factory)
www.childressfabrics.com

Clifton Carpets Inc., Martha Fussell, Jody Shafer, and Foster Owen
Custom rugs
214-526-7405
959 Dragon St.
www.cliftoncarpets.com

Contemporary Art Quilts, Sue Benner
Textile collage, art quilts
214-324-3550
8517 San Fernando Way
www.suebenner.com

Crown Cushion, Yong Chong 
Custom patio and interior cushions, upholstery, etc.
972-245-9064
1500 Interstate 35E, Ste. 100A
www.crowncushions.com

Cuellar Upholstery, David Cuellar
Custom upholstery and furniture
214-948-3230
1340 Plowman St.

Daubitz & Son Upholstery Inc., Carl Daubitz
Custom furniture upholstery and furniture
214-748-3551
914 Pollard St.

Fabrics & Frames, Fine Custom Furniture and Reupholstery, Andy Fischman
Custom furniture and upholstery
972-385-4097
13645 Welch Rd., Farmers Branch
www.fabricsandframes.com

The Fitting Room, Bea Harper
Custom upholstery, bedding, curtains, etc.
214-520-3600
4111 Lomo Alto Dr.

House of Design, Pam Yates
Custom drapery and upholstery (to the trade)
214-350-8159
 
Jim Couch Custom Draperies
Custom draperies, bedding, upholstery, etc.
214-871-7384
3108 Routh St. 

Klassic Upholstery
Custom upholstery for headboards, chairs, and sofas
214-474-2331
130 Leslie St.

Louis Roberts 
Custom furniture (to the trade)
214-698-9126

Willie B. Rogers & Associates, Willie B. Rogers
Custom upholstery
214-330-1620
3333 Hansboro St., Ste. 104

Hand-Painted Murals, Furniture, Wallpaper

Gillian Bradshaw-Smith

Gillian Bradshaw-Smith
Muralist and decorative painter
214-948-8472
311 N. Winnetka Ave.

A scenic designer and painter who has created more than 20 stage sets for ballet productions in New York and around the country, as well as backdrops for advertising clients such as Baby Dior, American Express, and Tiffany & Co., Bradshaw-Smith frequently takes her brush to the walls of some of the grandest homes in Dallas. Her decorative work includes mural design, trompe l’oeil, faux marble, faux bois, and painted and ceramic tile. Born in India, and professionally trained in England, Bradshaw-Smith is serious about her work—no sweet trompe l’oeil baskets of flowers here.

Jan Williamson, Plenty’s Horn
Furniture designer
PO Box 869, Pittsburgh, Texas
903-856-3609
www.plentyshorn.com
 
Jan Williamson hasn’t always designed and hand-painted children’s furniture. A 1985 portrait of Ronald Reagan painted by Williamson now hangs in his presidential library. But a passion for home design pushed her into designing and hand-painting children’s furniture. Her company, Plenty’s Horn, is now one of the most popular custom children’s furniture companies in America, and she’s got a slew of celebrity clients to prove it including Jerry Jones, Wayne Gretzky, Donald Trump Jr., and Rosie O’Donnell. Williamson’s custom designs—from the furniture, to the elaborate hand-painted designs, to the bedding—has kept business growing year after year. Demand has forced Williamson to train other artists to mimic her style, and Plenty’s Horn now employs six full time artists to do most of the hand-painting. Williamson continues to do all of the custom designs, as well as the designs for the permanent lines.
  

Carlos Espinosa, Furniture construction, repair, finishing, and painting conservation

Carlos Espinosa, Las Negras Studio
Furniture construction, repair, finishing, and painting conservation
214-871-0410
2103 Irving Blvd.
To the Trade

Carlos Espinosa and the artisans at Las Negras Studio create custom furnishings in old-world and Mediterranean traditions using techniques that have been around for centuries, including water gilding, the traditional process of applying gold or silver leaf to wood. A typical piece of hand-carved furniture will go through a 17-step process, each step done by hand in the studio. Afterward, the piece is distressed to provide an old look. Espinosa has been doing work in this trade for 35 years, and he refuses to make copies—each piece is one of a kind, ensuring that each handcrafted and finished project is unique. Creating custom furnishings that look centuries-old isn’t a simple process. “It takes a long time to make it look that old,” Espinosa says. And that’s after a six month stay on the waiting list.

Daniel Pedigo & Resurrection Art Group, Daniel Pedigo 
Custom decorative and fine art painting
214-324-4941

David Lyles Decorative Painting, David Lyles
Hand-painted designs, trompe l’oeil, frescos, etc.
972-240-0051
2814 Hollow Oak Dr.
www.seedavidlyles.com

Roman Estrada
Custom frescos, Venetian plaster, and finishes 

469-767-8592

Eyecon, Chris Arnold and Jeff Garrison
Large scale murals and graphics
214-941-0500
1341 Plowman Ave.
www.eyeconmurals.com

In Your Space Inc.
Custom wall finishes
214-540-0145
www.inyourspaceart.com

Carol Pankratz
Hand-painted walls, murals, and floor cloth rugs
817-923-2141
1450 West Allen Ave., Fort Worth
www.carolpankratz.com

Patina Finishes, Kaci Lyford
Custom decorative painting
469-233-2472
7700 Glen Oaks Dr., Frisco
www.patina-finishes.com

Plasters of Italy, Vallie Duncan
Custom Venetian plaster finishes
972-670-9850
2813 Grand Canyon Court, McKinney
www.plastersofitaly.com

The Proper Setting, Duke Horn and Silvia Thornton
Hand-painted mural calligraphy and decorative murals
214-339-7707
2438 W. 10th St.

Shaun Christopher Designs  
Custom decorative wall art
214-597-9059

Susan Abbey Designs, Susan Abbey
Custom finishes and murals
214-343-1874
9126 Raeford Dr.

Terrence Sweeney Design Inc., Terrence Sweeney
Custom patinas, gold leafing lacquers, trompe l’oeil, etc.
214-744-1544
www.terrencesweeneydesign.com

Lamps and Chandeliers

Elias Guerrero, Custom chandeliers and lamps

Elias Guerrero, Elias Guerrero Lighting
214-741-9859
1201 Slocum St.
www.johngregorystudio.com

Elias Guerrero, who has more than 15 years of training and experience making fine chandeliers and lamps, is best known for his hand-wrought, custom-designed lighting fixtures crafted from a variety of metals including iron, brass, and bronze. His artistry doesn’t stop there: Guerrero also designs furniture, fireplace screens, and mirrors, especially ones that can be wrought by hand in metal, his favorite medium, and he does his own silver, copper, gold, and platinum plating by hand.

Linda Swain, Cele Johnson Custom Lamps Inc.
Custom lamps and shades
214-651-1645
1410 Dragon St.
 
This 50-year-old bespoke lamp and chandelier company is among the most sought-after in the country. Owner Linda Swain, who bought the company from Cele Johnson 30 years ago, works closely with designers and their clients on lamp and shade designs, which her skilled staff then crafts by hand (she also has an artist and an electrician on staff). They are perhaps best known for producing custom lampshades, with smocking and pleating done by hand in the studio. Swain and company wire almost any object into a lamp, such as sculpture, Murano vases, Chinese porcelain, and antique glass, and all of their sconces, lamps, and chandeliers are UL-approved.

Charles Birdsong
Custom lighting
214-521-4764
5319 Cedar Springs Rd.

Yang’s Double Happiness, Mei Yang
Custom lamps and shades
214-747-8606
1633 Dragon St. 

Enchanted Lighting, Randall Gehring
Custom lamps
214-521-9623
6909 Preston Rd.  

Thomas Grant Chandeliers, Thomas Grant
Custom chandeliers (to the trade)
214-651-1937
1804 Hi Line Dr.

Mineral Hunters
Custom lamps made from minerals,   rocks, and semi-precious stones
214-752-8662
114 Cole St. 

Rutherford’s, Robert Rutherford
Custom lamps
214-357-0888
5417 W. Lovers Ln.
www.rutherfordsdesign.com

Stone, Glass, Tile

Steve Thompson, Stained and leaded glass maker

Steve Thompson
Stained and Leaded Glass Maker
214-328-4587
www.srtglass.com

Steve Thompson has been creating custom stained and leaded glass designs for more the 30 years. The mostly self-taught artist was fascinated with stained glass from an early age. “I used to sit in church as a child and admire the stained glass, and it was always in the back of my mind to learn how to do it,” he says. After high school, Thompson began hanging around Dallas’ few stained glass makers, including Roger MacIntosh. Eventually, when he wouldn’t leave, a few of them let him do some repair work. It wasn’t long before he was doing restorations and new jobs for them. His company specializes in European-style designs, utilizing old-world techniques that were first developed in the guilds around Europe. “We use antique-style leads, and we hand-paint everything and fire it in our kiln right here in the studio,” he says. Thompson does all the work himself, bringing in a small staff for only the largest projects, and he makes sure clients get exactly what they want by doing a series of sketches expressing their ideas. Once a design is chosen, Thompson does a life-sized color cartoon to show clients exactly what the finished product will look like. Not that the intricate drawing just goes to waste, though. “We cut the glass and the leading right on top of the cartoon, just like they used to do,” Thompson says.

Jim and Mary Lynn Bowman, Bowman Hot Glass
Glass artists
214-426-4777
1419 Griffin St. East
www.bowmanglass.com

Jim and Mary Lynn Bowman are the conceptual designers behind Bowman Hot Glass. Their custom clients include architects, designers, hotels, restaurants, and private clients. Some of their work for private clients includes fused glass tiles for kitchens and baths and leaded glass windows, all glass they make themselves in a furnace that keeps the molten crystal churning at a constant 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit. The company also houses a kiln large enough to fire pieces as large as 3 feet by 5 feet, allowing for hard-to-produce, large-scale works. Their designs are almost exclusively contemporary. “If a customer wants traditional stained-glass windows, we refer them to someone else,” Jim says.

Harold F. Clayton Carvings

Harold F. Clayton, Harold F. Clayton Carvings
Stone-carver and sculptor
214-824-7625
1640 S. Fitzhugh Ave.

You’ve probably noticed some of his sculpture grazing in Las Colinas; developer Trammel Crow commissioned the marble cows in the mid ’80s. Harold Clayton’s exceptional stonework is also found in the heart of homes across the nation. For 30 years, Clayton has carved stone, focusing mostly on limestone and marble to create custom sculpture and fireplaces, tailoring them to spaces, styles, clippings of ideas, or designs from his portfolio.

Saad Chehabi, Ancient Venetian Floor Co.
Stone and tile designer
and manufacturer
214-741-4555
1516 Edison St.
www.ancientvenetianfloor.com
 
Saad Chehabi was fascinated by the beautiful tile and stone designs in the old churches and public buildings on one of many trips to Italy, so he began taking pictures—lots of pictures. He turned his love affair into Ancient Venetian Floor Co., which creates custom designs of stone and tile floor medallions, wall mosaics, borders, tabletops, and bases. Although the company has standing, ready-to-install designs available, much of the work Chehabi does is custom. His designs can be seen all across the country, including the Bellagio Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas and Oprah Winfrey’s private residence in Florida. Chehabi uses such materials as rare forms of marble, limestone, and semi-precious stones, which he then has handcrafted in Italy.

Alamo Glass & Mirror Co., Rick Worsham
Custom shower enclosures and mirrors
214-821-2886
2823 N. Henderson Ave.
www.alamoglassco.com

Century Glass, Paul Connell
Custom mirrors and glass
214-823-7773
1417 N. Washington Ave.

Century Granite & Marble, Brian Sircely
Custom granite and marble countertops, fireplace surrounds, and outdoor grills
817-329-9499
695 E. State Hwy. 114, Southlake
www.centurygranitemarble.com

Tim Corbett
Custom tile, stone, and marble floors
214-763-9957
2523 Salida St., Irving

Fourth Generation Tile Creation & Stone Fabrication, Marco Garcia
Custom stonework
972-989-4134
7831 Colebrook Dr.

Gessell Studios, Polly Gessell
Sand blasted and carved glass
214-616-2430
10875 Shady Trail, Ste. 101
www.gessellstudios.net

Inwood Glass, Cory Worsham
Custom glass and mirrors
214-351-3553
2620 Willowbrook Rd.

(Top) KTO Design
(Bottom) Ancient Venetian Floor Co.

KTO Design, Jeanne C. Sanders
Reproduction antique mirrors and reverse painting
214-244-3827
www.KTO-design.com

Macias Marble & Granite, Jose Macias
Custom granite countertops
214-557-6561
111 N. Marsalis Ave.

Mammen Glass & Mirror Inc.  
Custom glass and mirror designs
972-790-4527

Marrs Art, Ron and Chris Marrs
Custom glass art installations
214-236-3740
11126 Shady Trail, Ste. 103
www.marrsart.com

Molloy Mirror and Art Glass Works Inc.
Custom glass and antique mirrors 
214-826-4452
2635 Floyd St.

Hand-Wrought Metals

Richard Potter, Hand-forged iron work

Richard Potter, Potter Art Metal Studios Inc.
214-821-1419     
www.potterartmetal.com
 
Potter Art Metal Studios Inc. has been designing and hand-forging iron for more than 85 years. His grandfather started the business in his backyard, but when neighbors began to complain about the heavy traffic coming and going, he set up shop on Henderson Avenue, and the company’s been there ever since. Potter learned the trade hands-on in his grandfather’s studio and always knew that he wanted to take over the business one day. “There aren’t schools for this kind of craftsmanship—you have to learn in the studio,” he says. After he earned a degree in business, Potter came back to the studio, taking over the design and operation process. Today, Potter employs two additional designers who help him design custom chandeliers, sconces, stair railings, and more, all from steel, brass, copper, and other metals. Almost everything he creates is hand-forged, but he also hand-repoussés steel, brass, and copper, and can even do custom metal spinning of brass, copper, and aluminum. Potter recently completed a polished steel fireplace mantel for Trammell S. Crow. Says Potter: “It undulates and flows in so many odd directions; it’s almost alien.”

Brad Oldham, Studio 3-0     
214-239-3993
1551 Edison St.
www.studio3-0.net

Studio 3-0

Brad Oldham can recreate almost any hardware, including historic pieces; all he needs are a few examples, or even just a photo. He’s recreated and replicated doorknobs, plaques, emblems, and banister caps for courthouses around Texas (for the Harrison County Courthouse, he finished an extensive recreation of a Lady of Justice statue and 11 bronze eagles). But he isn’t limited to mimicking great works of the past. He just finished working on the wine rack, door, and bronze work for Kraft restaurant in the W Hotel Dallas. Once when brother Todd Oldham was working on a design project for the Tiffany Hotel (now known as The Hotel) in South Beach, Fla., Brad was asked to manufacture cabinet hardware and ceramic tile for more than 50 rooms. Commercial or residential, Oldham custom designs hardware for any need, and his studio creates the moldings, casts pewter, and applies any finishes on site (some fabrication is outsourced to small local companies). And while he works in many different mediums, Oldham prefers bronze.
 
Cole Smith, Whitesmith & Co.
Custom iron and bronze work
214-871-0305
2719 LaClede Ave.
 
Cole Smith is an architect by trade, but 30 years ago he ran into a problem with the houses he was designing—quality hardware done to his demanding expectations was hard to come by. So Smith, who had taken classes in blacksmithing while in college in the ’40s, decided to design and make his own. Much of Whitesmith & Co.’s focus now is on creating intricate iron and bronze pieces for the home and commercial use. “We design doors, lanterns, railings, hinges, hardware, and it’s all historically matched to the house, down to the slotted screws,” Smith says. Busy with his architecture business, Smith hires skilled iron workers to handcraft his designs.

Artistic Metal Fabricators, Bill Flaherty 
Custom stairways and drive gates
214-341-0003 
10211 Plano Rd., Ste. 102

Central Model Ironcraft Studio, Ken Vrla
Custom stairways, display stands, drapery rods, tables, chairs, fire screens
214-631-3811
1148 Mississippi Ave.

Dallas Metal Fabricators, William V. Ross, Jr.
Custom metalwork
214-421-7417
2817 Logan St.

Elegante Iron, Jenny Sandlin
Custom Ironwork 
214-342-8987
9661 Wendell Rd.
www.eleganteiron.com

Elias Guerrero Lighting, Elias Guerrero
Custom ironwork
214-741-9859
1201 Slocum St.  
www.johngregorystudio.com

Gaby’s Shoppe, Jean Astie
Custom drapery rods and accessories (to the trade)
214-748-6644
1311 Dragon St.

Iron Craft Studio, David D’Avignon
Custom Iron gates, stairs, fences, etc.
817-626-2500 

Jim Cinquemani Metals Craftsman, Jim Cinquemani
Custom metal fabrication
214-742-2569
2412 Hardwick St.

Whiteley Metal Works, Larry Whiteley
Customized metal and iron fabrication
972-438-6882
1322 Richland St., Irving
www.metalworksdfw.com

Handmade Furniture, Millwork

Brian Wetz, Furniture designer

Bryan Wetz, Studio Wetz LLC
Furniture designer
214-215-1771
www.studiowetz.com
 
Bryan Wetz is a jack-of-all-trades. He’s an artist, furniture designer, and licensed interior designer. For his modern custom furniture collections, he uses hard-to-find woods such as fiddle-back maple, quilted cherry, and zebra, combining them with high-gloss lacquers and white-wash finishes to give his pieces a clean feel. Wetz chooses the stain, material, and finish for each piece, then he sends his drawings to a group of carpenters he partners with. Right now, Wetz says he’s “big on walnut burl and solid walnut,” but he’s always imagining different combinations that create a modern look with natural materials.

Jamie Brown, Manheim Ruseau
Custom furniture maker
972-387-4578
www.manheimruseau.com
 

Manheim Ruseau

Manheim Ruseau owner and president Jamie Brown’s love of European furniture is inherited—his grandmother founded the furniture company Don Ruseau in New York City 75 years ago. After taking over Don Ruseau, Brown acquired Manheim, a furniture company formed originally in New Orleans around 1900. The modern Dallas incarnation is acclaimed for detailed reproductions of French and English antiques, but Brown and his team create custom designs that are just as impressive. “We’ve done custom commodes and cabinets that look like the classic designs of old, but they actually have false fronts that hide a hydraulic system that can raise the television from inside the unit,” Brown says.

Felipe Goldring, Crecer Designs
Illustrations, renderings, and furniture design and manufacture
469-939-9122
4185 Dallas Pkwy., Ste. 1275
www.crecerdesigns.com

Felipe Goldring inherited his craft from a long line of designers (his grandfather worked for famed architect Le Corbusier, and he learned furniture construction in his father’s workshop). Goldring, whose design for a chair for a night watchman in a museum won an award in his native Columbia, carries on the family tradition with Crecer Designs. “Furniture usually has only one goal, to provide function. Our approach is that it becomes a piece of art,” Goldring says. In a time when most designers rely on computerized, CAD designs, Goldring hand-sketches detailed renderings on-site and often on-the-spot, which clients love because they can make changes along the way.

Brent Hull, Hull Historical
Historic millwork and design
817-332-1495
201 Lipscomb St., Fort Worth
www.hullhistorical.com

Brent Hull founded Hull Historical in 1993 after graduating from the preservation carpentry program at the North Bennet Street School in Boston. His commercial restoration projects include several listed in the National Register of Historic Places including the Dallas County Courthouse. His residential work involves designing and handcrafting millwork (moldings, mantels, cabinetry, doors, windows), often doing extensive research on the history of the designs, and then locating historic or reclaimed wood.

Artisan Door Gallery, Joseph Rey
Custom doors
972-386-0725
13619 Inwood Rd., Ste. 310
www.reymanu.com

Childress Fabrics/The Fabric Factory, Mike Childress
Custom draperies, table toppers, and furniture
469-633-1180/972-720-1400
2517 Ferris St.
8760 7th St., Frisco
12330 Inwood Rd.
(Fabric Factory)
www.childressfabrics.com

Shayne Cornaby
Custom stainless steel furniture maker
214-766-5566

Cuellar Upholstery, David Cuellar
Custom furniture and upholstery
214-948-3230
1340 Plowman St.

Daubitz & Son Upholstery  Inc., Carl Daubitz
Custom furniture and furniture upholstery
214-748-3551
914 Pollard St.

Daycor Enterprises Inc., Christopher Ingram
Custom wood furniture and cabinetry
972-838-2700
2702 McKinney St., Melissa
www.daycorenterprises.com

Rios Interiors, Natividad Rios
Custom Southwestern furniture
214-760-2430
1010 S. Pearl St., Building 2

Michael Stallings  
Custom furniture
214-668-0560 

Terrence Sweeney Design Inc., Terrence Sweeney
Custom furniture of all style and periods
214-744-1544
www.terrencesweeneyde-sign.com  

Credits

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