
Two high-end local brands have partnered to design a desk catered for a very specific task. Auburn-based furniture maker Thos. Moser and Freeport’s L.L. Bean collaborated to produce a limited edition fly-tying desk.
Thos. Moser has six showrooms including one in Freeport, which is home to L.L. Bean’s retail campus, distribution site and corporate headquarters.

The desk was developed by Thos. Moser’s master cabinetmaker
Warren Shaw of Hartford, Maine — who has been with the company 25 years — and L.L. Bean’s hunting and fishing expert Matt Bickford.

Shaw was one of the ones who loved it, and went from kitchen cabinets to making furniture at Thos. Moser.
“Like many of our folks, there’s not always a need to be classically trained, although that doesn’t hurt. But it’s more of a love for the craft and a vocational calling. That’s the way we’re made: to work with our hands, and to get a satisfaction out of that.”

The Times Record: Tell us what the fly-tying desk is and how it’s used.

It’s a functional desk, first, developed to be a piece of furniture meant to be in someone’s living room, like a slant-top desk. The lid can be folded down, someone can tie flies, store all their equipment, and when they’re done they can fold it up. It looks very similar to a traditional slant-top desk.

TR: What was your role with the L.L. Bean collaboration?


WS: Therein lies the challenge. If something is designed merely by form or aesthetic, it gets easier. But to mix the two, especially with something with so much specific function as a fly-tying desk, it was a fun challenge.
We went back and forth. Bean has experts that do flytying and they advised us, as far as function, and form, with some resets. There was back and forth in developing that for the fly-tying community. Obviously, we’re not experts but they are.
TR: Other than fly tying, how else can the desk be used?
WS: It was also developed so it could be slightly modified. It could be used as a traditional writing desk as it is. It can also lend itself to a slight modification in size and be anything from the original fly-tying desk to a secretary desk or anything in between — to write letters at computers. It’s got wire management so it could be used for a multitude of purposes. Sewing.
TR: What were some of the hurdles in designing and constructing the desk?
WS: One of the biggest challenges and execution was there’s an inset box when the lid is pulled down. There’s a box inside that is roughly 12 by 20 inches, and in that box there’s a bank of 14 drawers. The fronts are all made out of one board that is cut and the grain matches. Take 14 drawer fronts, take a board, cut it up, reassemble it with exacting gaps. If one of those fronts is sanded or cut too short, there’s no way to get another board to match that. That, logistically, is quite a feat.
It was a great challenge on the bench that was very enjoyable.
TR: What are some of the more challenging aspects of your job?
WS: Taking a live medium, such as wood — there’s characteristics that are consistent in a board of a species of wood, but each piece of wood is slightly different. To craft something and put it together — each piece has different challenges. One never knows when they’re building something what will present itself.
TR: How have you seen your industry change in the years you’ve been involved with it?
WS: I think the biggest change would be technology. Specifically, machining technologies that have influenced the craft, that are actually foundational. That has actually elevated the craft. We’re able to do things that you might not have been able to do. It definitely supports the craft. The craft doesn’t serve it. The technology serves the craft.
TR: What is it that draws you to this craft?
WS: I think it’s the exacting nature of it, the precision, the culmination of working with one’s hands and the mind, the combination of the two. To make something that’s enduring. We’re constantly challenging ourselves on the bench. The beam is challenging us.
Learning is never done. We grow in the craft.
jswinconeck@timesrecord.com
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