Wood goods and more at trailer on Route 41

SHARON – As  you drive into the town of Sharon, you might see on the front lawn of a house on Gay Street (which is also known as Route 41) a new addition to the neighborhood: a remodeled trailer with a variety of wood signs. 

There is a sign with a cutout in the shape of an evergreen tree and the letters BHWD; another sign says “Lola.” There is a wood box that is carved with the word “Dance” underneath a traffic sign that says, “Don’t Walk.”

The trailer is the work and the showroom of Brenda Hall, a veteran furniture-maker and wood finisher from Portland, Ore., who moved to Sharon in 2003 to study with furniture expert Ian Ingersoll of West Cornwall.  

Hall stayed in Sharon for more than a decade, then moved to Massachusetts and then Vermont. 

She returned to Sharon in February, and is testing an innovative way to display and sell some of the smaller wood products that she makes: jewelry, sculptures and utensils. Hall also does much larger projects, such as beds and tables. 

She likes to describe her work as “functional art.”

Hall loves wood in all shapes and forms. When the iconic Twin Oak trees died in Sharon in 2012 and 2013, the wood was shared among local artisans. Hall took one gnarly piece; it sits on her front lawn now, in front of the trailer. 

The trailer itself is an example of Hall’s handiwork. As much as she loves wood, she also loves vintage campers, cars and furniture. The trailer on her lawn, which she completely redid, is  known as Lola and is a 1965 Utopia Panoramic camper. Only a small portion  of the vehicle (the trunk and the metal curves on the outside) were left untouched. 

Outside of the trailer, in a small refrigerator, Hall also sells produce, flowers and eggs from her small garden. Conceivably, one could put together a small meal and also buy the dishes and serving utensils all at one time. 

Hall is at the trailer on Friday afternoons and Saturdays to sell her woodwork (which are produced under the name Brenda Hall Wood Design, or BHWD). The eggs and garden products are sold on the  honor system. 

To learn more about Hall and her work (and Lola the trailer), go to www.bhwooddesign.com.

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