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Tomfoolery Wood
By: Michael Johnson

October 11th, 2024

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Solid Hardwood Vinyl Storage From Tomfoolery Wood Co.

If your IKEA shelves wont survive another move, it may be time for an upgrade

Recently, members of my family expressed the desire for a vinyl record shelf that was “furniture grade”, aka something that was more suited for display in the main floor of a house than the bog-standard workhorse that is the Ikea Kallax. Not to knock the longstanding budget favorite of record collectors everywhere, but it doesn’t always fit into more finely-appointed environments.

Thus, the search was on for a furniture piece to house some of the records kept at my family’s house outside of Denver, the kind that wouldn’t look out of place next to more mature furnishings like the marble-top table that my grandmother rescued from the side of the road during the great depression.  We knew we wanted something in solid hardwood, preferably walnut, and something that matched the more modern aesthetics of the rest of the furniture in the house. The Kallax units we had usually relied upon weren’t out of style per-say, but they don’t scream quality, or solidity (even if in reality when assembled correctly they can take a fair amount of abuse ).

The thing is, it turns out that furniture-grade vinyl record shelving is far more niche than I ever realized. Ikea may sell a lot of their modular vinyl shelves, but that popularity hasn’t really caught on in the higher tiers of home furnishing stores like West Elm or Crate and Barrel. If you want hardwood LP shelving, chances are you are going to be browsing mom and pop operations that build to order either on their own small websites, or on marketplaces like Etsy.

One of the shops that immediately caught my eye was that of Tomfoolery Wood Co., a small made-to-order Seattle company that seemed to focus heavily on mid-century inspired vinyl storage. Their owner and founder, Dan Deschenes, started in the woodworking industry at the age of 19 while he was an undergrad at Washington State. Now the owner of his own business making custom furniture out of solid hardwoods like Walnut, Maple, White Oak, Cherry, Madrone, and others. Their designs are simple, but have just the right amount of quirkiness that makes them unique, particularly with their “Offstack” collection, which would fit right in with any classic mid century bungalow.

The Toomfolery 'Emerson' vinyl console

Eventually, impressed by the quality we saw in photos, we decided to place an order for the company’s 82” “Sesto” vinyl console in walnut with a solid back. We wanted something that held the maximum amount of records while still low enough to fit along the railing of the basement stairs. The solid back would prevent any records from falling through the railing down into the basement, and eliminate the need for any type of “backspacer”-like device.  The Sesto, along with most of their LP shelving, is not as deep as the Ikea Kallax, this means that records do not sit terribly far back when pushed to the back of the shelf.

The Sesto, like most of the Tomfoolery catalog, does not come cheap. A Walnut model with a solid back will set you back $3,100, and that’s not including the freight shipping which is invoiced after the piece is completed. But as anyone that knows a woodworker will tell you, quality lathe work in solid hardwoods costs a pretty penny, especially when produced at a very small scale. My excellent custom Harbeth stands made by my friend Killian Smith at Denton Wood Workers, another small outfit I can highly recommend, were not cheap even with generous “friend pricing” (basically materials cost). But the difference between those stands and mass produced, screwed-together alternatives was and is still staggering. So naturally I had high hopes for Tomfoolery and the Sesto.

My custom Ash Harbeth stands from Denton Wood Workers, with IsoAcoustics Gaia Feet

Tomfoolery does offer custom orders, but for all their established models, ordering on the website is fairly painless, just select your preferred wood (their wood choices vary, but ours was offered with Myrtle, Madrone, White Oak, Maple, Cherry, and Walnut), and style variations, and checkout is otherwise automated.  What isn’t painless however is the order lead time.  Right now Tomfoolery states that its orders are typically finished 16 weeks from the order date. Our order was placed on March 17th of 2024, and wasn’t ready for shipping until August 20th.  Once the unit was finished, owner Dan Deschenes sent along photos of the completed piece and price quotes for crated, freight delivery. White glove delivery ran $575 for shipping from Washington to Colorado, while if you’re feeling particularly strong and brave the curbside option was $344 (prices will depend greatly on your distance from Washington state and our proximity to major metro areas).

Fortunately, the long awaited result of this expensive piece of furniture was worth it. The fit, finish, and workmanship of the Sesto shelf was outstanding, with interlocking joints at every angle, sturdy feet that have no danger of wobbling or dislodging, and small details that scream quality.  Even the thin backing piece of the unit, which I expected to be particleboard, is solid hardwood! (The rear was unfinished but I’m certain the option to finish it is an easy request). While the biggest box sets didn’t clear the top of the shelving, many did, including Analogue Productions UHQR boxes, as well as MoFi One Steps. 


The 'Sesto' shelf in our family home

Interlocking wood joints in our 'Sesto'

With traditional fiberboard shelving that we’re all accustomed to, you would certainly see some bend and give if the shelving was on any type of feet. Not so here, as the Sesto has maintained its sturdy shape since delivery. The feet are not an afterthought, but rather made from the same hardwood and appear is if they will stand up to many years of abuse.

It might be a few years before a Tomfoolery piece is called for in my own listening room, but I can already picture how great a unit like their “Rascoff” triple bookcase, or 7-tier “Offstack” unit would look in my future space.

The Corner version of Toomfolery's 'Offset' shelving

If you are tired of the particleboard merry-go-round of big-box modular record shelves, your next step should really be hardwood, and in this boutique field Tomfoolery Wood Co. has proven itself worth the upgrade.

Comments

  • 2024-10-11 06:05:42 PM

    13th Duke of Wymbourne wrote:

    Have you now crossed the transition from using furniture to show off your LP collection to using LPs to show off your furniture? :)

    • 2024-10-11 10:43:39 PM

      Josquin des Prez wrote:

      Yes, we now play music to listen to our systems, and gather our records together to put our furniture on display. 😂

  • 2024-10-11 06:35:34 PM

    Fred Morris wrote:

    I have been very happy with Ryan Tinsel of Portland OR - made to order modular stands, high quality, reasonably priced, order through Etsy.

    • 2024-10-12 06:28:06 PM

      Michael Fremer wrote:

      Me too. They are the Rackit modular shelves devised by Per Madsen. We championed those decades ago. After Per retired a few began producing similar ones. Ryan's are the most accurate and of the highest quality. I have 7 on order right now!

  • 2024-10-11 07:42:36 PM

    Larry Casey wrote:

    Wow, Gorgeous

    I had a friend make me a stereo rack in maple and walnut hardwood and love it.

    At today's prices I will have to stick with my Ikea but I would love to own a record storage unit like the ones displayed. Beautiful !!!!

  • 2024-10-11 07:57:28 PM

    Josquin des Prez wrote:

    Holy bankruptcy, Batman!

    Even if my Ikea (gloss white at that) doesn't survive a move, buying all of it all over again for the 90 linear feet of records I have (~5000 LPs) is still far less costly than just one of these fancy shelves. As beautiful as they may be I'll pass on that.

    I do have one cabinet from Divider Records ("Morad" unit in black ash) for my "current playlist" and Tone Poet collection. It holds about 300 records, half in record store bin style. It was $1200 when I bought it.

  • 2024-10-11 08:19:38 PM

    Mark Ward wrote:

    Great to see you tackle this perennially thorny issue for record collectors. I have older Ikea units, pre-Kallax, which are very attractive and sturdy, with hinged doors and sliding glass panels, but I am badly need of new shelving, and will inevitably go the Kallax route, with back panels added (I have found the trick to having Ikea furniture last is to have it professionally assembled at time of purchase). But if my budget allowed it, these units look FABULOUS!! The only remaining question is - how on earth can you have all those marvelous LPs not in-house!!!

    • 2024-10-11 09:00:50 PM

      Josquin des Prez wrote:

      Mark, you should also look into the back spacers from Turntable Revival for the Ikea shelves. I use those and they work perfectly. https://turntablerevival.com/collections/premiumbackspacer/products/v3-premium-backspacer-for-ikea-kallax-expedit

      • 2024-10-11 09:52:02 PM

        Mark Ward wrote:

        Great tip! What did you do to seal the back? Many options....

        • 2024-10-11 10:05:30 PM

          Josquin des Prez wrote:

          I don't seal the back. For the large 4x4 Kallax I brace the back corners with angle brackets and large wood screws. For the other ones I have (2x4 and 2x2) I don't bother. They have stood without issue, fully packed with records, for nearly a decade.

  • 2024-10-11 09:36:24 PM

    JuzDisGuy wrote:

    It never ceases to amaze me how much these units cost, given the simple build that is involved, particularly with the Sesto model. This is about a 2 hour build (assuming you have a good saw) + staining time. Total cost worth solid mahogany would be around $600. Replace the premium wood with pine (which can be stained in a walnut) and you’re looking at $300. It really does pay to learn some basic carpentry skills.

  • 2024-10-11 09:36:26 PM

    JuzDisGuy wrote:

    It never ceases to amaze me how much these units cost, given the simple build that is involved, particularly with the Sesto model. This is about a 2 hour build (assuming you have a good saw) + staining time. Total cost worth solid mahogany would be around $600. Replace the premium wood with pine (which can be stained in a walnut) and you’re looking at $300. It really does pay to learn some basic carpentry skills.

    • 2024-10-12 10:31:03 AM

      Zaphod wrote:

      At first glance it may look simple but God is in the details. I would not call these simple and what I call basic carpentry skills could not build these beauties.

      1. Where I live premium quality Walnut costs more than twice that of cheap pine, so I believe your material cost might be off.
      2. I also find your time of build way too conservative. To build anything at a high level of quality takes a lot more time than what it might take the typical home builder with basic carpentry skills.
      3. The cost of skilled craftsman labor is expensive, way more expensive than just the cost of his hourly pay.
      4. You forgot to add the cost of tools, glue, finish materials, packing materials, training, research and design, website and marketing, insurance, overhead, profit, hard to please customers, tire kickers, and mistakes just to name a few.

      At least ten years ago I worked for a woodworking company that made built in cabinets for high-end homes. He charged 10k to 60k so these seem to be a good bargin.

      • 2024-10-13 01:00:20 AM

        JuzDisGuy wrote:

        I agree with you on point 4 - i.e. if you’re doing this as a business there is all kinds of overhead costs. This is all the more reason to learn DIY though. The Sesto model is super simple design. I speak from experience, I love this mid-modern style and have built one of these myself, as well as a wall of solid pine floor to ceiling built-in bookshelves (15 ft x 9 feet). I also built my backyard deck (40 ft x 15 ft). Each of these would have cost me at least 6-10 times what it cost me to do (sweat equity and materials). The driving force behind this - I have champagne tastes but a beer budget 😋. Agree it’s not for everybody though.

        • 2024-10-13 04:25:07 PM

          Zaphod wrote:

          I have the same problem, Champagne taste but a Beer budget!

  • 2024-10-11 10:58:09 PM

    rshak wrote:

    Nice work - but I really miss Per Madsen's modular Rackitt units. During the 90's and early 2000's I accumulated over 60 of his modular record cubes, most of them "deluxe" models fitted with smoke glass doors. I was able to stack them, 3 to 5 units high, with the bottom unit fitted with casters and a nice piece of finished wood fitted over the top units.

    This is a highly functional and visually attractive LP storage system, very easy to disassemble for moving and reassemble/reconfigure. From a financial perspective, I was able to add units gradually as my collection grew (and funds permitted).

    • 2024-10-12 06:30:23 PM

      Michael Fremer wrote:

      see the comments above! Ryan Tinsel's are identical to Per Madsen's modular Rackit system cubes and he gives Per full credit. I just ordered 7 (more).

      • 2024-10-17 05:26:41 PM

        Jim Shue wrote:

        Michael - I've owned Per's racks since the early 90s - have purchased many of the Ryan Tinsel racks over the past 4 years - THEY ARE SUPERB! As good as the OG Per racks - indeed the base is better due to superior corner bracing. Ryan needs a dedicated website - Etsy is so not the right vibe-presentation for his business imo. Also a modular LP storage solution like the Per-Ryan racks is the only way to go!

    • 2024-10-12 06:30:24 PM

      Michael Fremer wrote:

      see the comments above! Ryan Tinsel's are identical to Per Madsen's modular Rackit system cubes and he gives Per full credit. I just ordered 7 (more).

  • 2024-10-12 12:56:21 AM

    bwb wrote:

    $159 , yea, it is particle board but amazingly sturdy when all put together. I have about 3,000 records stored on them for years with no issues, no sagging, easy to assemble... and cheap. I would show a picture but since this web site is stuck in the 1990's that isn't an option

    https://www.amazon.com/Better-Homes-Gardens-12-Cube-Organizer/dp/B098287HGR/ref=pd_lpo_sccl_3/147-3233639-3785121?pd_rd_w=jHaKs&content-id=amzn1.sym.4c8c52db-06f8-4e42-8e56-912796f2ea6c&pf_rd_p=4c8c52db-06f8-4e42-8e56-912796f2ea6c&pf_rd_r=529216H54XYK6Q2ZPA9Q&pd_rd_wg=A2kfP&pd_rd_r=3dc6fefb-86aa-4404-89a2-b90a9b07d63e&pd_rd_i=B098287HGR&psc=1

  • 2024-10-15 08:32:23 PM

    Anton wrote:

    Not sure where to post this, but a dip or a trend?

    https://www.musicradar.com/music-tech/recording/has-the-vinyl-revival-skidded-off-track-sales-of-vinyl-albums-down-33-percent-since-2023

    Taylor Swift better releases a new LP before New Years.

    • 2024-10-17 05:29:31 PM

      Jim Shue wrote:

      ALREADY DEBUNKED~! The vinyl haters really are unhinged (grossly twist stats to create clickbait headline) - SAD!

    • 2024-10-20 07:41:50 PM

      Michael Fremer wrote:

      The story is ill-informed. It took the data from a Billboard story that uses Luminate's new and definitely skewed and defectivfe statistical modeling to flog the dead horse that the vinyl resurgence is a "bubble" about to burst. Industry insiders and observers like Warner Music's Billy Field's knew this number for first half of 2024 would be low because of Luminate's modeling. He called it out at the beginning of the year and all are working to improve the modeling. Sales will be up in 2024 probably at least 6 or 7% with no Swift release and probably closer to 10%. Which is excellent considering how great 2023 was.