Smith & Co. Custom Tap Handles
Smith & Company Custom Tap Handles is committed to hand-crafting the finest tap handles for beer faucets. Our handles are made from high-quality hardwoods and hand-made on a wood turning lathe. We have several standard designs to choose from in a variety of select hardwoods, or you can come up with something unique! All handles are made to order. Let us add that extra touch to your bar, kegerator, or homebrew system.
Saturday, January 25, 2014
Handles at Select Beer Store
Wes at Select Beer Store in Redondo Beach asked me to make him 16 handles for his soon-to-be expanded draft system. Being a regular I was happy to get them done. Wes wanted four different woods so we went with Maple, Teak, Mahogany, and Walnut. The shape is based off the B style handle with custom dimensions. They are 1.25" in diameter and a total of 6.5" tall including the ferrule. The finish shown is combination of Mahoney's Walnut Oil and Mahoney's Wax finishes. Stop by Select Beer Store at 1613 S. Pacific Coast Highway in Redondo Beach for a pint or bottle of your favorite craft beer.
New Handle Designs
These handles were a custom request but I'm adding them as a regular item. The ones shown are Maple, Redheart, and Ebony. The handle portion is 4" tall with a 2.25" circle topper added. Standard sizes will be 4", 6" and 8" with the option of putting the circle on top. Prices will start at $35 for the 4" handle and $25 extra for the circle topper. The finish shown is an oil/wax combination.
Wednesday, May 8, 2013
New Handles at Monkish Brewing
Henry, the owner and brewmaster at Monkish Brewing in Torrance, CA wanted some handles for his new bar and draft system in the tasting room. We decided on a slightly modified version of the B-2 style handle, only a little narrower. The wood is Pao Ferro with only a light finish on them. A few of the handles have worm holes and burl patterns, so each handle is really unique. Please stop by Monkish Brewing at 20311 S. Western Ave. Torrance, CA 90501 and have a glass of Henry's fantastic beer (Anomaly is one of my favorites!) and check out the handles while you're at it.
Friday, February 8, 2013
Marblewood Handles
I recently bought a small sample of Marblewood. I had never used it before and was curious about it. It is a yellowish colored wood with orange to brown streaks literally marbled through the wood. It is a very dense wood, is a little difficult to work with and is hard on the tools. Here I have one A-2 style handle done. I have enough wood to make a total of four. If anyone is interested in one or more, they are $35 each. If someone wants all four, I'll discount that. Here is some pictures of the finished handle and the raw wood.
Monday, January 21, 2013
Growler 6-Pack
I wish I could say that this was an original idea of mine, but it's not. I met a guy at a local brewery that told me that he had a six-pack holder for growlers. I immediately thought that was an ingenious idea. I've needed something to keep them from rolling and clanging around in the car, and transporting multiple growlers at once required more hands than I currently have. A holder seemed to be a great solution. This all happened right before New Years, so I quickly rounded up some scraps and threw this together to use it while making the rounds getting growlers for New Years.
It fits all sizes of growlers and I plan on making some inserts to accommodate some smaller growlers. It is made out of 1/2'' MDF and 1/4'' plywood. It is glued and screwed to hold together. It does have a downside. When full it is heavy. Six full growlers is about 3 gallons, which is about 25 lbs, just in beer weight, not counting the glass and wood. It does the job, though and can handle all the weight.
Full on New Years Eve. Full growlers left to right, front to back include:
Bootlegger's Brewery, Fullerton, CA - Chocolate Mint Porter (I wish I had more to put over ice cream!)
Stone Brewing Co, Escondido, CA - Levitation, One of my all-time favorites from Stone)
Stone Brewing Co - IPA, another fantastic favorite
El Segundo Brewing Co, El Segundo, CA - Citra Pale Ale, the Citra version of their house Pale Ale
Eagle Rock Brewery, Los Angeles, CA - Solidarity, their English Mild and at 3.8%
you can drink it all night
Monkish Brewing Co, Torrance, CA - Anomaly, a dark Belgian Strong
that is probably my favorite from them
It fits all sizes of growlers and I plan on making some inserts to accommodate some smaller growlers. It is made out of 1/2'' MDF and 1/4'' plywood. It is glued and screwed to hold together. It does have a downside. When full it is heavy. Six full growlers is about 3 gallons, which is about 25 lbs, just in beer weight, not counting the glass and wood. It does the job, though and can handle all the weight.
Bootlegger's Brewery, Fullerton, CA - Chocolate Mint Porter (I wish I had more to put over ice cream!)
Stone Brewing Co, Escondido, CA - Levitation, One of my all-time favorites from Stone)
Stone Brewing Co - IPA, another fantastic favorite
El Segundo Brewing Co, El Segundo, CA - Citra Pale Ale, the Citra version of their house Pale Ale
Eagle Rock Brewery, Los Angeles, CA - Solidarity, their English Mild and at 3.8%
you can drink it all night
Monkish Brewing Co, Torrance, CA - Anomaly, a dark Belgian Strong
that is probably my favorite from them
Monday, January 14, 2013
Christmas Orders
Here's a few pictures of handles that I was working on around Christmas. I had several orders of all types, commercial and private. A bar in New York City, The Dead Rabbit, contacted me about making them some handles. That was the week before Christmas. The bar was to open December 27th! That gave me only a couple days to get the handles completely done and delivered in time, despite the craziness of everyone else trying to deliver packages around that time. Everything went well and they were finished with time to deliver without unreasonable shipping costs.
On the flip side, a couple homebrewers got handles for Christmas. Their significant others contacted me about getting them handles in time for Christmas and those also went out without a hitch.
On the flip side, a couple homebrewers got handles for Christmas. Their significant others contacted me about getting them handles in time for Christmas and those also went out without a hitch.
Saturday, January 12, 2013
Christmas Cutting Board Gifts
I decided to make some cutting boards for some Christmas gifts, including a big end-grain board for my wife. The first four are made from Maple, Cherry, and Walnut. They are made from varying thicknesses of all of the woods arranged into the pattern. They are about 1'' thick with handles routed into the underside for easy carrying. The finish is just mineral oil.
The next board is my wife's. It is also made out of Maple, Cherry, and Walnut, but I also used some scraps of Cocobolo that I had left over from the handles that I posted about earlier. When I was buying the wood, I found a piece of maple that was a little spalted, giving it a tan/grey figure that weaves through part of the board. This added to the accents, breaking up the squares and rectangles visually.
The process to make the board started similar to the above four, but involved several more steps. Basically I started by making nine small boards, each with a different random pattern. Next I cut those boards up into two inch strips. Then I re-glued pieces of each of the boards together into chunks that would become a eighth of the finished board. Then it was trimming and re-gluing all of the chunks into the finished board. After some planing and sanding, it was done. The finished board is a little over 12''x20'' and about 1.75'' thick. This board is beautiful and should last forever.
In the foreground is the Anchor 2012 Christmas beer. This year is really fantastic. A little lighter on the spicing and very drinkable now. I'm still going to hang on to some to compare in a couple years. Cheers to the folks at Anchor Brewing in San Francisco. Behind the bottle and glass is one of the nine boards the finished board was made from.
While I have no intention of going into the cutting board business, I guess if anyone is interested in a board like one of these or in any other wood or pattern, please contact me and I give you an estimate.
The next board is my wife's. It is also made out of Maple, Cherry, and Walnut, but I also used some scraps of Cocobolo that I had left over from the handles that I posted about earlier. When I was buying the wood, I found a piece of maple that was a little spalted, giving it a tan/grey figure that weaves through part of the board. This added to the accents, breaking up the squares and rectangles visually.
The process to make the board started similar to the above four, but involved several more steps. Basically I started by making nine small boards, each with a different random pattern. Next I cut those boards up into two inch strips. Then I re-glued pieces of each of the boards together into chunks that would become a eighth of the finished board. Then it was trimming and re-gluing all of the chunks into the finished board. After some planing and sanding, it was done. The finished board is a little over 12''x20'' and about 1.75'' thick. This board is beautiful and should last forever.
In the foreground is the Anchor 2012 Christmas beer. This year is really fantastic. A little lighter on the spicing and very drinkable now. I'm still going to hang on to some to compare in a couple years. Cheers to the folks at Anchor Brewing in San Francisco. Behind the bottle and glass is one of the nine boards the finished board was made from.
Here are all nine boards cut up and stacked, ready to be re-glued
Two of the "chunks", one-eighth of the finished board
While I have no intention of going into the cutting board business, I guess if anyone is interested in a board like one of these or in any other wood or pattern, please contact me and I give you an estimate.
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