
The Side Quest Mid-Century Modern Executive Desk with Locking Drawers
This executive desk borrows its bones from midcentury modernism, back when designers treated furniture like small architecture. A thick wood slab floats above twin drawer cabinets on slim steel supports, hovering with just enough air beneath it to make you look twice. The cabinets themselves hang suspended within the frame, flanking an open cavity where you actually sit. Nothing touches the floor except four slender legs.
The drawers lock with actual keys, which is not a nostalgic detail but a practical one. The grain tells you this wood came from somewhere specific. Patterns flow uninterrupted across drawer fronts and wrap around a back panel that looks just as considered as the front. This is a desk you can float in the middle of a room. We cut boards sequentially and arrange them by hand so the figure reads as continuous rather than patchwork.
That gunmetal steel frame stays out of the way on purpose. Thin cylindrical legs and horizontal members trace an outline around the wood without fighting it for attention. The linear drawer pulls follow the same logic, running nearly full width and keeping hardware minimal and horizontal. Everything here earns its presence or gets edited out.
Each desk starts with lumber from trees that fell naturally around Los Angeles. We mill and join everything in our workshop using techniques that let solid wood span open distances without sagging or separating over time. The hard-wax oil finish handles coffee and elbows and late nights without complaint.
This is a wood executive desk for home offices that deserve better than flat-pack particleboard. It suits the self-employed and the finally-promoted and the working-from-home-permanently crowd who figured out that environment shapes output.
Put in the work and sit somewhere worthy of it.
Original: $7,595.00
-70%$7,595.00
$2,278.50Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
This executive desk borrows its bones from midcentury modernism, back when designers treated furniture like small architecture. A thick wood slab floats above twin drawer cabinets on slim steel supports, hovering with just enough air beneath it to make you look twice. The cabinets themselves hang suspended within the frame, flanking an open cavity where you actually sit. Nothing touches the floor except four slender legs.
The drawers lock with actual keys, which is not a nostalgic detail but a practical one. The grain tells you this wood came from somewhere specific. Patterns flow uninterrupted across drawer fronts and wrap around a back panel that looks just as considered as the front. This is a desk you can float in the middle of a room. We cut boards sequentially and arrange them by hand so the figure reads as continuous rather than patchwork.
That gunmetal steel frame stays out of the way on purpose. Thin cylindrical legs and horizontal members trace an outline around the wood without fighting it for attention. The linear drawer pulls follow the same logic, running nearly full width and keeping hardware minimal and horizontal. Everything here earns its presence or gets edited out.
Each desk starts with lumber from trees that fell naturally around Los Angeles. We mill and join everything in our workshop using techniques that let solid wood span open distances without sagging or separating over time. The hard-wax oil finish handles coffee and elbows and late nights without complaint.
This is a wood executive desk for home offices that deserve better than flat-pack particleboard. It suits the self-employed and the finally-promoted and the working-from-home-permanently crowd who figured out that environment shapes output.
Put in the work and sit somewhere worthy of it.





















