Nashville, Tennessee — Where Music Meets Craft
A Different Kind of Luthier

Salvage
& Sustain

Turning storm-felled giants into instruments that carry decades of history in every chord.

The Beginning

When Nature Destroys, We Preserve

The 2010 tornado season left Nashville with a wound. Century-old oaks and sweetgums, witnesses to countless songwriting sessions and late-night jam sessions, lay scattered across the hillsides. For most, they were debris. For us, they were an invitation.

Salvage & Sustain was born from a simple belief: the most musical wood in the world was already here, waiting. Storm-felled timber, hundreds of years in the growing, carrying the density and resonance that modern forests simply cannot match. We didn't want to plant new trees and wait a lifetime. We wanted to honor what had already lived.

Today, every instrument we craft carries that spirit forward. Each piece of reclaimed wood tells a story—of weather, of time, of survival. We aren't just building guitars. We're preserving legacies.

"Every scar in this wood is a story. Every knot is a year this tree survived before the storm finally brought it down."

— Marcus Cole, Founder & Head Luthier
The Wood

Old Growth, New Life

The timber we source comes exclusively from trees that have stood for 80 to 200 years. This isn't reclaimed lumber from old barns or shipping pallets—it's heritage wood, grown in soil that no longer exists, exposed to weather patterns that have shifted with the climate.

Our team works directly with Nashville's urban forestry department and private landowners to identify fallen specimens within 72 hours of a major storm event. Speed matters. The longer wood sits exposed to the elements, the more its cellular structure degrades. We intercept these trees at their peak, beginning the drying and stabilization process immediately.

Each batch is tagged with its origin: the Hendersonville oak that came down in 2019, the Franklin sweetgum that survived three tornadoes before finally falling in 2021. When you purchase a Salvage & Sustain guitar, we'll tell you exactly which tree your instrument came from.

"You can't rush resonance. These trees spent a century absorbing Nashville's humidity, its heat, its music. That doesn't transfer in a kiln."

— Elena Vasquez, Wood Specialist
The Method

From Storm to Song

01

Salvage

Within 72 hours of a major storm, our team identifies and recovers fallen heritage trees from across Middle Tennessee.

02

Assess

Each log is evaluated for grain pattern, density, and structural integrity. Only 15% of recovered timber meets our standards.

03

Season

Air drying in our climate-controlled facility for 2-5 years. No kilns. No shortcuts. Time is the only catalyst.

04

Craft

Hand-shaping, bracing, and finishing by our team of master luthiers. 200+ hours per instrument. Zero compromise.

The Result

Sound That Takes Generations to Develop

Modern guitar manufacturers chase vintage tone. They artificially age wood, use chemical treatments, and apply elaborate finishing techniques—all trying to replicate what happens naturally over decades. We've skipped that step entirely.

Our instruments don't need to sound old. They are old. The cellular structure of wood that grew before your grandparents were born has already undergone the transformations that musicians spend thousands chasing. When you play a Salvage & Sustain guitar, you're not hearing a simulation. You're hearing history.

Rich Harmonics

The natural aging process creates a complex overtone profile that modern wood simply cannot replicate. Every note resonates with depth.

Sustained Clarity

Dense, slow-grown timber holds energy longer. Notes bloom rather than fade, giving your playing a sense of space and dimension.

Responsive Touch

These instruments breathe with the player. Subtle variations in attack and pressure reveal new tonal colors with every performance.

"I've played $50,000 vintage Gibsons. I've played $5,000 modern reissues. Nothing prepared me for the clarity and sustain of a 120-year-old Nashville oak."

— Sarah Mitchell, Session Guitarist
The Workshop

Built in Nashville, For Musicians Who Care

Our 8,000-square-foot workshop sits in the Wedgewood-Houston neighborhood, a stone's throw from some of the finest studios in the country. We built it this way intentionally. When a producer needs a specific tone, they know where to find us.

Every instrument that leaves our workshop has been played and evaluated by our team. We don't ship instruments untested. If a guitar doesn't meet our standards, it doesn't ship. Simple as that. We maintain a six-month waitlist because quality cannot be rushed—not for any price, not for any deadline.

We also offer limited workshop tours to prospective buyers. There's nothing quite like seeing your instrument take shape, running your hands across the raw wood before the first coat of finish goes on. If you're serious about what you play, come see how we build it.

Wedgewood-Houston
Nashville, Tennessee

Play Something
That Mattered

Every guitar we build carries a fragment of Nashville's past. These were trees that witnessed the birth of country music, that absorbed the echo of honky-tonks and the hum of recording studios. They're gone now—but not entirely. They live in the music you make.

Salvage & Sustain isn't for everyone. It's for musicians who understand that an instrument is more than wood and wire. It's a vessel. A witness. A second chance for something that should have ended differently.

Visit the Workshop