In 1987, Victor Salas fathers business, ARTchitectural Interiors, was tapped to build hand-carved chairs, a table and throne for the record-setting mass Pope John Paul II delivered to a crowd of 350,000 in San Antonio.

When it came time to deliver the custom-crafted throne, the Salas family opted for a slightly eccentric, labor-intensive option. After building a custom trailer outfitted with ropes, they secured the elaborate chair on top and pulled it roughly 16 miles to Westover Hills by hand.

We pulled it all the way up Culebra, all the way to the site, recalls Salas, who was 10 at the time. It was a whole-day event. It was crazy.

As for the reasoning behind this unusual delivery method, Salas explained that it was the most authentic, old-world strategy the family could devise for the task at hand.

Even today, authenticity and old-world sensibility are hallmarks of the work Salas designs and builds at his own business, Forged Oaks. With a name that marries his two main materials of choice iron and wood the company is a go-to for interior designers, builders and homeowners looking for one-of-a-kind furnishings, from hand-carved doors and fireplace mantles to wrought-iron gates and staircase railings. The statement-making pieces are built to last traits that distinguish them from off-the-shelf items and hold a status Salas likens to an heirloom.

After graduating Central Catholic High School in 1995, Salas relocated to Austin to study design, photography and drawing at the University of Texas. While pursuing his BFA in art history, he kept a hand in the family business, often spending weekends at job sites, spreading the word about ARTchitectural Interiors and making sales.

Later, after landing an architecture degree, he interned for a firm in St. Louis but found his duties chiefly generating AutoCAD drawings from a desk unfulfilling compared to the family business hands-on work. So, he returned to San Antonio in 2003 and started full-time with his father.

Salas rose to a senior-level position at ARTchitectural Interiors but ultimately found himself at a crossroads. While his father pursued commercial work, Salas was more interested in the high-end residential market. These divergent paths led to a falling out, and Salas struck out on his own in 2014.

Hurdles marked his first year on his own. Not only was he suddenly without tools and equipment, he was without a workspace.

The following year, Salas secured his own shop and upgraded to the 12,000-square-foot space he now occupies in North Shearer Hills.

During a tour, Salas explained his creative process, which typically begins with a conversation or sketch that informs an AutoCAD drawing, then a to-scale mockup. Such mockups abound in his shop slices of elaborate banisters, decorative window casings and wooden railings expertly finished to mimic marble.

When asked what sets his shop apart, Salas explained that hes driven by both design and detail. As an example of this attention to the latter, he showed off a forged iron banister. Appearing deceptively light with its swirly, filigree pattern, the piece looked surprisingly seamless and organic every intersection had been smoothed over with a coat of Bondo then painted with costly automotive paint to weather the elements.

We use all solid wood, Salas added. Were not using particle board or MDF. So, the way we construct things is more old-world.

Thanks to his team which comprises iron workers, woodworkers and finishers Forged Oaks is also a one-stop shop.

Were able to work with the client, work with the designer, work with the architect, Salas said. We do drawings, make the samples, build it, do the finish and do the installation all in-house.

Two of Salas most recent projects involved solid wooden doors created in the signature style of architect ONeil Fords brother Lynn Ford, the craftsman behind the woodwork at Trinity University. While one job involved the restoration of an original door burned in a fire, the other entailed a new build created in collaboration with local designer Hillary Walker Conrey.

Victor is a true joy to work with, Conrey said. Not only is he a gifted artist in multiple mediums, but hes professional and collaborative as well. Hes got a can-do spirit and is able to make my most outlandish decorator ideas a reality.

Victor inherently understands the nuances of a beautifully designed object, added Clare Watters, lead project manager for the specialty hardware company Alexander Marchant. Everything he builds reflects this sensibility.

For more about Victor Salas and Forged Oaks, visit forgedoaks.com.

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Master Craftsman: Getting to Know Victor Salas, the San Antonio Artisan Behind Forged Oaks - San Antonio Current

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November 22, 2019 at 2:43 pm by Mr HomeBuilder
Category: Interior Decorator