Southern Seasoned - rustic wood decor

Southern Seasoned - rustic wood decor Southern Seasoned crafts rustic decor that tells a story.

From barnwood sunflowers to driftwood mug trees, each piece blends charm and function—handmade from reclaimed wood to bring warmth, character, and countryside memories to life!

A weird but cool & creative thing I did a few seasons ago.  My wife planted sunflowers and I noticed the spent stems loo...
06/18/2026

A weird but cool & creative thing I did a few seasons ago. My wife planted sunflowers and I noticed the spent stems looked like candy canes so I added paint!

“I __________ rustic décor!"Fill in the blank for me today. What’s the piece that makes your home feel a little slower.....
06/17/2026

“I __________ rustic décor!"

Fill in the blank for me today. What’s the piece that makes your home feel a little slower... a little warmer... a little more you?

I’m planning my next batch for summer and your answers help more than you know.

Which one better fits you…

I slow down with…

I decorate my home with…

I feel at home with…

I always smile at…

I welcome guests with…

I brighten my kitchen with…

❤️~Chris

Meet today’s purdy pasture princess — 11" of reclaimed‑barnwood charm and summertime Americana joy! ❤️ 🇺🇸 🐄 Every now an...
06/16/2026

Meet today’s purdy pasture princess — 11" of reclaimed‑barnwood charm and summertime Americana joy! ❤️ 🇺🇸 🐄

Every now and then I finish a piece that makes me stop, smile, and remember why I love doing this work. This little lady is one of those. She’s cut from real reclaimed barnwood, hand‑painted, and finished with a bit of old barn‑tin for her cowbell collar---the kind of materials that already lived a whole life before becoming art.

I think that’s what inspired her… the idea that something weathered, worn, and full of stories can still shine bright and bring joy into a home. She reminds me of front‑porch evenings, county‑fair summers, and the kind of simple, good memories that stick with you.

And if you’re already picturing that zaney country gal in your life--- the one who belts out the 4th of July before the calendar even flips, well… this lil’ pasture princess might just be her kind of happy.

Thanks for your support, I ❤️ you all! ~Chris

Handmade barnwood pieces don’t ask for much.Just display them, let the light hit those worn edges, and give them time to...
06/15/2026

Handmade barnwood pieces don’t ask for much.

Just display them, let the light hit those worn edges, and give them time to gather even more character than they already carry.

These old boards have lived long before they ever became a Hereford on your wall. With a little dusting now and then, they’ll keep doing what they were made to do—lift the corners of your mouth, warm your heart, and slow you down every time you pass by.

That’s the kind of care that keeps a piece... and you alive. ❤️ Chris

06/14/2026

That look on your face when you finally receive and see your rustic décor in person! Respond with a gif....

Happy Saturday my sweet souls! I'm late to posting today. I'm out in the workshop working on some "Red, white & Moo!" ba...
06/13/2026

Happy Saturday my sweet souls! I'm late to posting today. I'm out in the workshop working on some "Red, white & Moo!" barnwood cows. Something crossed my mind when thinking about the art I make. I think my product sits between say your super primitive Americana décor and your store bought farmhouse. Prim Americana because that style seeks to replicate very old American decor. I do something similar by using authentic barnwood and reclaimed materials. And store bought farmhouse because I do seek to create a product that largely I can replicate every time with consistency, other than a bit of different wood grain per item.

I'm happy with the lane my rustic folk art sits in. And from all your encouragement and compliments, it surely sounds like so are you! Thanks for being here! God bless, ❤️ Chris

PS. Hope everyone is OK after all those tornados the other night. We had at least 9 on the ground here in northern Indiana. Prayers for those affected! 🙏

06/12/2026

For the love of fishing!

A recent reclaimed barnwood fishing sign I built for a gal, a surprise for her son. 🎣

Roll Call! Where are you from?Sometimes I feel like I don’t really have a “home.” We’re living up here in northern IN ri...
06/11/2026

Roll Call! Where are you from?

Sometimes I feel like I don’t really have a “home.” We’re living up here in northern IN right now, but before this we spent six years in middle TN. And before that, I lived in several states — born in Southern California, seven years in Phoenix, and almost ten years in greater San Antonio. I don’t know if Indiana will be our forever home, but my hope and prayer is that if we ever have to move again, it would be soon — and that the next place would be our forever home. For our sanity, and especially for our kids, so they can put down roots while they’re still young.

Ultimately, God knows, and I trust Him.

And as some of you might’ve experienced, even when you’re doing your best to follow God’s lead, friends and family still have plenty of opinions about what they think is best for you. I’m not perfect, but I just wish people could trust God the way I try to. Isn’t that what it’s all about?

As I always tell Becca: "Be it here, there, or somewhere else — whatever God’s will is for our lives".

Where are YOU checking in from today? Drop your hometown in the comments. ❤️ Chris

🌾 What Makes Me DifferentEvery time I sit down to build something, I’m reminded why I do this — and what sets my work ap...
06/10/2026

🌾 What Makes Me Different

Every time I sit down to build something, I’m reminded why I do this — and what sets my work apart. I use authentic reclaimed materials. Not “farmhouse‑style,” not faux anything… the real deal. I’m talking 100‑year‑old barnwood, rusty barn roof tin, driftwood, and boards that have lived entire lifetimes before they ever reach my shop.

I keep the standout pieces from every batch — the ones with the deepest weathered grain, the wildest patina, the stories etched right into them. There are so many kinds of barnwood, each with its own character. My favorite is that heavy‑weathered, deeply eroded grain you only get from decades of wind, rain, and sun on old barn siding.

Some boards still carry sawmill marks — those rounded scratches left by the giant old blades whose teeth were bent opposite directions to keep them from binding. Those marks are signatures of another era, especially on boards pulled from the inside of a barn.

Then you’ve got the chippy paint boards. That look can’t be faked. True chippy paint only happens after years of shrinking, swelling, and weather working against the wood. It’s history you can hold.

And of course, there are the little details that make barnwood what it is: rusty nails still in place, nail holes with rust halos, hinge marks, even hinges still attached. These aren’t flaws — they’re fingerprints.

Some of my recent builds, like the 22" barnwood cows, were a mix of all these worlds. Some boards still had original chippy paint, others had that deep weathered grain. And my candy corn sets over the years? They’ve had everything — heavy grain on the front, sawmill marks on the back, a little chippy paint, and if I could safely leave it, a rusty nail right in the décor.

Barnwood species vary too. Old barns were built with whatever was available — poplar, ash, pine, oak. I can usually tell by weight, but the real giveaway is when I cut into it and see the internal color.

Even the thickness tells a story. Most barnwood falls between ¾" and 1", sometimes up to 2" thick. You won’t find me building anything out of thin, flimsy lumber. These boards were made to last.

I guess what I’m saying is… I’ve spent enough years with this material that I’m becoming a bit of a barnwood professional. And it’s these reclaimed materials... these real, lived‑in, weather‑worn boards, that set my work apart from other wood décor makers. Sure, you can buy faux barnwood. But why would you, when you can have the real thing?

And there’s one more thing that sets me apart... my faith. I believe there’s a deep connection between rural life, farm living, hard work, church, and family. Those things built America, and they’re worth holding onto. My work is my way of capturing those cozy countryside moments and nostalgic memories and passing them on.

Thanks for being here and cheering me on. My heart is to make pieces that cheer for you.

God bless, 🤎 Chris

Below: examples of different barnwood patina I've used over the years

Today’s Packed Order 📦❤️Got a special package headed out this morning, y’all — and this one’s for my friend Victoria.I l...
06/09/2026

Today’s Packed Order 📦❤️

Got a special package headed out this morning, y’all — and this one’s for my friend Victoria.

I love her orders because they’re always custom. Always creative. Always, “Hey Chris, can you make me this?” And you know me… I’m always up for a challenge.

Inside this box are two beach‑themed pieces she dreamed up:

A patriotic Maine Crab — her East Coast twist on our patriotic moo cow

A fishing sign that’s a surprise for her son who loves to fish (tell me that’s not the mark of a great mama)

Customers like Victoria keep me inspired, stretched, and grateful. Thank you for trusting me with your ideas and letting me bring them to life.

And thank you all for being here and rooting for me. God bless, ❤️ Chris

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Hendersonville, TN

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