landscape itself teaches you about color over time. In Sheridan, where high-altitude light shifts dramatically between seasons and the interiors of ranch homes and mountain lodges age alongside the land, Black Limba's tendency to darken with years becomes not a liability but a design asset—those grey to nearly black streaks deepening into the wood's golden brown heartwood like veins of mineral through sandstone. Rosebud ships this material from Louisville knowing that a woodworker in Sheridan will watch the veneer mature across Wyoming winters, its figuring growing richer and more defined in ways that complement the natural patina of leather and stone found in this region's finest interiors. It is that same principle of honoring transformation—of trusting the material to become more fully itself—that resonates as the wood moves eastward toward the refined residential work waiting in Short Hills, where