On design
“Good furniture ages the way a good face does — more interesting, more characterful, never worse.”
Royal Nilambur
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On design
“Good furniture ages the way a good face does — more interesting, more characterful, never worse.”
Royal Nilambur

Edavanna Workshop · Malappuram
No nails. No screws in the structural frame. No shortcuts on finishing. The techniques here are the reason the furniture lasts 200 years — not the wood alone.
The principle
The difference between furniture that lasts 15 years and furniture that lasts 200 years is not the wood alone — it is the joinery. Wild Nilambur teak with poor joinery will still fail. Correct joinery in a mediocre wood will outlast correct joinery in a mediocre wood. The material and the method have to be right.
At Royal Nilambur, we use traditional joinery — mortise and tenon, dovetail, drawbored wooden pegs — in every structural frame. These are mechanical locks, not adhesive bonds. Wood moves with humidity and temperature. Traditional joints are designed for that movement; they tighten as the wood breathes. Metal fasteners corrode and loosen over the same period.
This takes longer. It requires more skilled hands. It cannot be automated. That is why most commercial furniture doesn't use it — and why pieces built this way survive generations.
Structural joinery
Used in structural frames on every piece that leaves our workshop.
Mortise & Tenon
Chair and table frames, bed structures, cabinet carcasses
A precisely cut tenon (male) fits into a mortise (female cavity), creating a mechanical lock. As wood expands and contracts with Kerala's humidity cycles, the joint tightens rather than loosening. The backbone of structural furniture joinery for thousands of years.
Dovetail Joints
Drawer boxes, cabinet corners, wardrobe joinery
Interlocking tails and pins resist any pulling force. Hand-cut dovetails are a visible proof of craftsmanship — no two hand-cut patterns are identical, and the angle and spacing tells you how the craftsman was trained.
Drawbored Pegs
Table bases, bench frames, traditional bed frames
Wooden pegs driven through slightly offset holes pull the joint tighter as they're hammered home. This pre-dates glue as a joinery technique. The joint does not depend on adhesive — the mechanical fit alone holds the frame together.
No nails. No screws. No shortcuts.
Metal fasteners corrode and loosen over time. Traditional joinery, done correctly, outlasts the wood itself. The joints in a properly built teak piece are still rock-solid after 150 years — we've seen it in documented Kerala furniture from the 19th century.
The process
Timber selection at the KFDC depot
Every piece begins at the Kerala Forest Development Corporation licensed depot. We select logs based on grain direction, oil content, and intended use — tabletops need wide, stable boards with consistent grain; chair legs and structural frames need straight-grained, dense material. Selected logs are photographed and shared with the customer before we begin.
Milling and drying
Rough timber is milled slightly oversized, then rested to release internal stresses before being milled to final dimensions. This two-stage approach prevents warping after assembly. Moisture content is checked and maintained at the right range for Kerala's climate before any joinery work begins.
Joinery — hand-fit every joint
Mortises are chopped by hand with chisels for the precision a router cannot match. Tenons are cut and pared to a fit that slides together under hand pressure but won't fall apart when inverted. Each joint is dry-assembled to verify fit before any glue is applied. Drawbored pegs are driven while glue is wet, pulling joints tighter as they cure.
Hand-planing and smoothing
After assembly, all surfaces are hand-planed to remove mill marks and bring out the wood's natural oils. A sharp plane takes microscopic shavings and leaves a surface that no sandpaper can match — the teak oil begins to emerge here, giving the characteristic warm amber glow. Critical surfaces (tabletops, armrests, drawer fronts) are planed until they feel smooth to the bare hand.
Finishing — oil built into the wood
We apply multiple coats of teak oil or Danish oil over several days. Each coat penetrates the wood, hardens, and is rubbed back before the next application. This builds a finish within the wood — not a film on top of it. The result is a surface that repels water, develops richer colour with age, and cannot crack or peel because there is no surface film.
Inspection before dispatch
Every piece is inspected for joint integrity, finish consistency, and hardware operation before it leaves. Drawers are tested for smooth movement. Doors checked for fit. The piece is photographed before packing. We do not dispatch pieces we would not put in our own homes.
Why it matters
Joints that tighten over time
Traditional mortise and tenon joinery tightens as the wood moves with humidity. The piece you receive in year one will be more structurally solid in year twenty — not less.
Fully repairable
Because every piece is solid wood with traditional joinery, any part can be repaired by any competent woodworker — us, or anyone you trust. There are no MDF cores, no laminated panels, no proprietary parts. The piece is what it looks like, all the way through.
Natural variation is part of it
Wild teak grain is not uniform. No two pieces look identical — grain patterns, slight colour variation, and the occasional small character mark are natural. These are features of genuine wild-grown timber, not defects. A piece with perfectly uniform grain is almost certainly plantation wood or veneer.
It develops, not deteriorates
Wild teak furniture gets better with age. The surface deepens in colour over time, the grain character becomes more pronounced, and a piece in daily use develops a patina that no new piece can replicate. This is not a marketing claim — it is the documented behaviour of tectoquinone-rich wood over decades.
See it for yourself
You're welcome to visit our workshop in Edavanna and see the joinery, the timber, and the people who build your piece. Let us know in advance via WhatsApp and we'll make sure someone is available to walk you through.