ROUGH CUT CEDAR. REFINED EXECUTION.
CUSTOM EXTERIOR CEDAR SIDING INSTALLATION
This wasn’t off-the-shelf siding. We special ordered 3/4 inch cedar and had it custom milled with a true rough face so the texture, depth, and shadow lines matched the architecture of the home.
With all the sharp angles, soffit returns, and changing planes, we laid the boards out like a mapped pattern. Board widths and seams were sequenced so the vertical rhythm stayed consistent as it wrapped corners and climbed faces.
Behind it all, the flashing and weatherproofing were built to handle every transition correctly.
From the street it feels simple. Up close, you see how intentional every line had to be.
TIMELINE
1 MONTH
BUDGET
GALLERY
EXPLORE THE COLLECTION

VISION
“Simple from the street. Highly intentional up close. Every line, angle, and board placed with purpose.”
This exterior was never about just “putting siding on a wall.” The architecture itself forced precision.
Tight inside corners. Floating soffit lines. Angled returns. Deep window insets. Multiple planes meeting at non-standard transitions. The kind of geometry where standard siding methods start to look sloppy fast.
We knew early this couldn’t be done with off-the-shelf material.
We special ordered and custom milled 3/4 inch thick rough face cedar, something you almost never see used in modern residential siding anymore. The added thickness gave the walls depth and shadow. The rough face kept the texture raw and honest. Every board was selected, cut, and placed intentionally so the vertical rhythm stayed consistent across changing elevations and complex angles.
Behind the cedar, the wall assembly was carefully rewrapped and prepped so this wasn’t just beautiful, it was protected. The trim details, edge conditions, and soffit transitions were all rebuilt to accept the thicker material cleanly without bulky build outs or awkward reveals.
What looks simple now is actually the result of dozens of small decisions made correctly.
From a distance, it reads as clean modern cedar cladding.
Up close, you see the craftsmanship in how the lines land, how the corners meet, and how the material brings the architecture to life instead of fighting it.
This is the kind of work that separates installing siding from building an exterior skin that belongs to the home.











