The door hardware you select is more than just the security that keeps your home safe as you will be operating and using them every single day.

From wifi connected smart locks to fully mortised flush pulls; in addition to installation, we can make the slight adjustments to the jams to make your doors operate as they were intended to.

Stops are installed to keep your walls and hardware from being damaged. We put discreetly placed floor mounted bumpers in rooms where there is tile base board and hard angled openings instead of installing stops on the hinges to protect your doors and your casings from being damaged.

Striker plates are positioned and mortised into the opening precisely, making your doors shut just tight enough to not allow movement from draft and so your deadbolts will latch without effort.

  • Entry Handlesets

    Dummy Handlesets

    Deadbolts

    Smart Locks

    Dutch Doors

    Self Closing Hinges

  • Swinging Handlsets

    Flush & Edge Pulls

    Full Mortise Doors

    Cup Pulls

    Hinge Replacement

    Base, Floor & Hinge Stops

    Door Magnets

    Industrial Latches

    Ball Catches

    180 Degree Hinges

  • Hinge Replacement

    Hinge Finials

    Cremone Bolts

    Surface Bolts

    T-Astrigal Bolts

    Brass Straps

  • Barn Door Tracks

    Recessed Pulls

    Floor Guides

When selecting hinges for your doors finding the correct gauge or thickness is important. Too thick and the reveals will be uneven causing your door not to shut on the strike side. Too thin of a hinge will cause your door to bind creating a spring like opening.

We have had clients that wished to upgrade their hinges to ball bearing or even thicker styles which require us taking each door off and re mortising the hinge side as well as the jam of each opening.

If your swinging doors aren’t shutting correctly or automatically opening/shutting (ghosting) then a hinge adjustment is required.

Patented by Linus Yale Jr. in 1865, the cylinder mortise lock revolutionized locking hardware. A pocket cut into the short edge of the door allows a longer and more substantial mortise box to slide into the door itself providing superior protection.

These locks require special preparation and cost more than modern tubular lock styles. Many restoration projects and clients with older homes choose mortise locks for their charm in addition to maintaining the period look they want to achieve.

Do to their elegance, superior locking ability and ease of use many new builds opt for the mortise lock style. As with all currently available architectural details, you can find mortise locks in all styles, modern and classic in an unlimited amount of finishes.