King Dahl Creative

King Dahl Creative Emphasizing creativity & sustainability. Locally-sourced, salvaged, or FSC certified materials fuel my passion for a low-impact operation.

The beauty of nature fuels my aesthetic. Collaborating with other local artists fuels my love of community.

Jewelry Rack - Sapele and Maple
11/11/2025

Jewelry Rack - Sapele and Maple

Shipping this baby to New Mexico!Bass Marimba with a custom, additional High E.Red Oak Frame, Ash Tone Bars, Padauk acce...
08/07/2025

Shipping this baby to New Mexico!
Bass Marimba with a custom, additional High E.
Red Oak Frame, Ash Tone Bars, Padauk accents.

My busy, little chef. ❤️
07/15/2025

My busy, little chef. ❤️

07/15/2025
Built with love for my granddaughter ❤️. A “Mud Kitchen” to play with outside and make sautéed pinecones with mud sauce,...
07/06/2025

Built with love for my granddaughter ❤️. A “Mud Kitchen” to play with outside and make sautéed pinecones with mud sauce, with a side of pebbles and leaves!
The photo with my wife is for proportion.
Crafted primarily from Sequoia, and cedar and fir shop scraps.
Can’t wait til she visits next weekend!

07/06/2025

My dad handed me two clothespins. “This,” he said, “is the story of everything.”

In one hand: a clothespin from the 1960s. Solid, dense hardwood — likely maple or beech — warm to the touch, smoothed by time and use. It still works perfectly, some 60 years later.

In the other: a clothespin from 2025. Lighter, paler wood, maybe pine or poplar. It feels brittle. The spring is thinner, less stable. It was marketed online as “extra durable.” My dad raised an eyebrow.

At first glance, it’s just two clothespins. But in truth, it’s a snapshot of an entire economic philosophy — the shift from durability to disposability. From stewardship to consumption. From craftsmanship to cost-cutting.

This is planned obsolescence in action.

We don’t often think about how products are intentionally designed to fail. That a company might choose materials not for longevity, but for built-in expiration. Why? Because a product that lasts is a product that doesn’t need to be bought again. And if it doesn’t need to be bought again, it doesn’t generate continuous profit.

So, to keep the wheels of commerce turning, products must break. Slowly, subtly — a frayed wire here, a cracked hinge there. Just enough to send us back to the store. Again and again. Not because we want more, but because what we had was never built to last.

It might seem like a clever business strategy — but the costs are everywhere.

We see it in our landfills, overflowing with the remnants of yesterday’s purchases. We feel it in our wallets, spending more over time to replace what shouldn’t need replacing. And perhaps most invisibly, we feel it in our spirits — growing accustomed to the idea that nothing is meant to endure, not even the things we once cherished.

But what if this philosophy doesn’t just apply to objects? What if it’s conditioned us to treat relationships, homes, communities — even the Earth — as temporary, disposable, easily replaced?

What if the very fabric of our culture has been rewoven in the image of the broken clothespin?

Because make no mistake: this model is unsustainable. A planet cannot withstand infinite waste from a species that insists on building everything for planned failure. Resources are finite. Landfills are finite. Time is finite.

And yet, the good news is, this clothespin from the 1960s reminds us that another way is possible. That we once made things to last — and we can again. That quality, intention, and respect for materials matter. That we can design for repair instead of replacement. For continuity instead of collapse.

The story in my palm is about more than laundry. It’s about the choices we make — and the world they create.

Computer Desk details…
07/02/2025

Computer Desk details…

Had fun building this Computer Desk crafted from Sapele and Live-edge Quilted Maple.
07/02/2025

Had fun building this Computer Desk crafted from Sapele and Live-edge Quilted Maple.

06/03/2025

Delivered to its new home in Friday Harbor. Custom-designed, Ebonized Black Walnut, Figured Maple and Walnut Runner. Mea...
06/02/2025

Delivered to its new home in Friday Harbor. Custom-designed, Ebonized Black Walnut, Figured Maple and Walnut Runner. Measures 49”X97”x30”.
Shown also with a custom, floating, cantilevered kitchen island bar top in coordinating Ebonized Walnut (installed previously).

Details…4” thick Walnut and Ebonized Walnut Pedestals Waterfall Figured Maple center strip sitting 5/16” proud of the ta...
05/28/2025

Details…
4” thick Walnut and Ebonized Walnut Pedestals
Waterfall Figured Maple center strip sitting 5/16” proud of the tabletop.

Heading to its new home in Friday Harbor this weekend. 49”X97”.Ebonized Black Walnut, Figured Maple, and natural Walnut.
05/28/2025

Heading to its new home in Friday Harbor this weekend. 49”X97”.
Ebonized Black Walnut, Figured Maple, and natural Walnut.

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Bellingham, WA
98225-98229

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