In Door County, where cherry orchards meet limestone bluffs and every structure faces the patient erosion of lake-effect seasons, architectural plywood must do more than perform — it must age with the grace that this peninsula demands. Where Detroit called for panels that could hold their own against industrial scale, the cottages, galleries, and year-round homes along this narrow finger of Wisconsin ask Rosebud's veneers to carry warmth into tight, light-filled spaces where every surface is noticed up close. Cherry-faced panels find particular resonance here, echoing the landscape itself while delivering the dimensional stability that protects against the humidity swings between frozen January silence and the full green press of August. It is this same attention to species selection and substrate integrity that travels south from Louisville to the Door County trades, and further still into the hands of craftspeople working just beyond the peninsula, in communities like Doylestown where the architectural conversation shifts again.