Renovation requires a systematic approach. Doorways need framing, case furniture needs reliable supports, and the entire interior needs visual unity. You can purchase elements separately from different suppliers, spending time on logistics and risking materials of different shades and quality. Or you can be smarter—complete both tasks with one comprehensive order: moldings for doorways and furniture supports from a unified production line.

Why is this beneficial? Because decorative door architraves and furniture legs made from the same wood species, in a unified style, with identical surface treatment, create visual harmony in the interior. The door skirting board (many wonder: what is this element correctly called — architrave, molding, or skirting?) interweaves in tone with the supports of a chest of drawers, sideboard, or console. A material connection arises between architectural details and furniture.

A comprehensive approach saves not only money on delivery and volume discounts but also the most valuable resource — time. One supplier, one catalog, one order, one delivery date. Let's examine in detail how to organize such an order, what to pay attention to when choosing, and which technical nuances to consider.

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Doorway millwork: more than just framing

The term 'millwork' encompasses all profiled elements sold by the linear meter. For a doorway, it's an entire system of interconnected components.

Architraves: the face of the doorway

An architrave is a decorative strip framing the door frame on the room side. It performs two functions simultaneously: aesthetic (creates a finished look for the door) and practical (conceals the installation gap between the frame and the wall, protects against drafts).

Standard architrave width varies from 60 to 120 mm. For small apartments with low ceilings, narrow architraves of 60-70 mm are suitable — they don't overload the space or visually steal area. For spacious rooms with ceilings from 3 meters, wide architraves of 90-120 mm are appropriate, creating solidity and monumentality.

Architrave thickness influences the visual perception of the door. Thin architraves of 8-10 mm look elegant, light, almost weightless. Thick architraves of 18-25 mm create power, solidity, and a sense of sturdiness.

Architrave profile determines the style. Flat rectangular architraves are the choice for minimalist and modern interiors, where conciseness of lines is valued. Profiled architraves with convexities, roundings, and bevels suit classical and neoclassical spaces. Carved architraves with floral or geometric ornamentation are for rich historical interiors (Baroque, Art Nouveau, Russian style).

Architrave material affects durability and aesthetics. Solid oak provides maximum strength, expressive texture, and durability of 50+ years. Solid beech gives a uniform fine-pored surface, ideal for painting and tinting. MDF architraves are a budget option with absolute geometric stability but less tactile pleasantness.

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Door jamb extensions: when the wall is thicker than the frame

A jamb extension (add-on board, expander) is a flat plank installed in the doorway when the wall thickness exceeds the width of the door frame. A standard frame is 70-100 mm wide, while walls in brick houses reach 250-380 mm. The difference is covered by the extension.

Extension width is calculated individually: wall thickness minus frame width minus rabbet depth (usually 10-15 mm) minus architrave overhang (5-7 mm to create shadow). Standard extensions are produced in widths of 100, 150, 200, 250 mm. For non-standard wall thicknesses, extensions are made to custom sizes.

Extension thickness is usually 10-16 mm for MDF and 18-25 mm for solid wood. Thin MDF extensions save doorway space but require a rigid frame. Thick solid wood extensions are self-supporting, stable, and don't require additional supports.

Extensions and architraves should be made from the same material and have identical finishes. A color mismatch between the extension and architrave is noticeable and destroys the visual unity of the door.

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Threshold: completing the opening from below

A threshold is a horizontal element at the bottom of the doorway. It performs several functions: closes the gap between floor coverings of different rooms, creates a barrier against drafts, and visually completes the door composition.

Threshold height varies from 10 to 40 mm. Low thresholds of 10-15 mm are almost unnoticeable, don't create obstacles when walking, and are suitable for apartments where children and elderly live. High thresholds of 30-40 mm create a clear boundary between rooms, provide better sound insulation, but require getting used to.

Threshold width corresponds to the door frame width — usually 70-100 mm. Material — solid wood or MDF laminated to resemble wood. It's important that the threshold is made from the same wood species and has the same finish as the architraves and extensions.

Capitals and rosettes: decorative accents

Capitals are decorative elements installed in the upper corners of the doorway above the architraves. They imitate architectural column capitals, creating solemnity and monumentality. Capital sizes range from 80×80 mm for modest doors to 200×200 mm for grand entrance groups.

Corner rosettes are decorative overlays at the corners where vertical and horizontal architraves meet. They mask complex 45° miter cuts, simplify installation, and add visual detailing. Rosette diameter is 40-80 mm depending on architrave width.

These elements are especially effective in classical interiors with high ceilings and enfilades of rooms, where doors become architectural focal points.

Furniture supports: the foundation of case furniture

Furniture supports (legs, balusters, posts) are not just functional parts bearing weight. They are visual accents that define the character of the furniture and connect it with the overall interior style.

Typology of furniture supports

Round turned legs are a classic option for furniture in traditional styles. Diameter varies from 40 mm for elegant tables to 120 mm for massive sideboards. The surface can be smooth cylindrical or turned with decorative rings, spherical thickenings, or vase-shaped expansions.

Square legs with cross-sections of 60×60, 80×80, 100×100 mm suit modern and minimalist furniture. Edges can be sharp (for high-tech) or rounded (for Scandinavian style). Groove milling creates vertical rhythm, visually elongating the leg.

Tapered legs with decreasing cross-section towards the bottom create visual lightness even for massive furniture. Taper can be smooth (for neoclassical) or sharp (for Art Nouveau). Taper angle is usually 3-7° from vertical.

Curved legs in the form of cabriole (S-shaped curve) or saber-shaped are characteristic of Baroque, Rococo, and Art Deco styles. Manufacturing requires bending steamed beech or carving from solid wood using a template. Such legs turn furniture into works of art.

Carved legs are decorated with three-dimensional ornamentation — botanical (acanthus leaves, grape vines), animalistic (lion paws, eagle heads), and geometric. The carving depth reaches 15-30 mm, which requires manual work by experienced carvers.

Leg height by furniture type

The height of furniture legs determines ergonomics and visual perception.

For sofas and armchairs: low legs 80-120 mm create a visually squat, stable appearance, suitable for Eastern and ethnic styles. Medium legs 150-200 mm are the standard for European furniture, providing a comfortable seating height and access under the furniture for cleaning. High legs 250-350 mm create lightness, visually unclutter the space, and are characteristic of Scandinavian style.

For dressers and cabinets: legs 100-150 mm high lift the body off the floor, protect the bottom from moisture during wet cleaning, and create a sense of floating. Without legs, the body sits directly on the floor — this is a budget-friendly but visually heavy option.

For tables: kitchen and dining tables require a standard height of 730-750 mm from the floor to the top of the tabletop. With a tabletop thickness of 40 mm, the leg height is 690-710 mm. Coffee tables have a height of 400-500 mm, corresponding to leg heights of 360-460 mm.

For buffets and sideboards: tall furniture usually has low legs 80-120 mm or is installed on a plinth. High legs under a heavy body create a visual impression of instability.

Load-bearing capacity and quantity calculation

A wooden leg with a cross-section of 80×80 mm made of oak can withstand a static load of up to 800 kg. For beech, this figure is about 700 kg. However, in real conditions, a safety factor of at least 2.5 is applied, meaning the design load for an 80×80 mm leg is taken as 280-320 kg.

The number of legs for furniture is calculated based on conditions of uniform weight distribution and body geometry.

For dressers and cabinets up to 800 mm wide, four legs at the corners are sufficient. The weight of a typical dresser with contents is 150-200 kg, the load on each leg is 37-50 kg — this is a minimal load, providing a huge safety margin.

For buffets and wardrobes 1200-1800 mm wide, six legs are required: four at the corners and two intermediate ones at the front and back, 600-900 mm from the corners. This prevents the bottom from sagging under the weight of dishes, books, and other heavy items.

For dining tables with rectangular tabletops, the standard scheme is four legs set back 100-150 mm from the edge. For tables longer than 2.5 meters, six legs are recommended to prevent tabletop sagging.

Materials science: oak or beech?

The choice of wood species for millwork and furniture supports determines not only appearance but also performance characteristics, durability, and price.

European oak: the benchmark of strength

Oak's density of 650-750 kg/m³ makes it one of the hardest European wood species. Its compressive strength along the grain is 58 MPa, while its bending strength is 105 MPa. A Janka hardness of 5.5 kN means that a force of 5500 newtons is required to embed a steel ball with a diameter of 11.28 mm to half its radius depth.

Oak's texture is expressive: large open pores, clearly visible annual rings, and medullary rays that create a 'mirror' effect on a radial cut. Its natural color varies from light sandy (young oak) to grayish-brown (old oak). Staining expands the palette from almost white (bleached oak) to black (bog oak).

Oak's biological resistance is due to its high tannin content — up to 10%. They protect the wood from rot, fungi, and insects. Oak elements last 50-100 years without visible signs of deterioration.

Oak's disadvantages: high price (1.5-2 times more expensive than beech), difficulty of processing due to hardness (requires carbide tools), and a tendency to crack during rapid drying.

Eastern beech: a versatile material

Beech's density, 620-680 kg/m³, is slightly lower than oak's, but still high. Its compressive strength is 62 MPa (higher than oak!), and its bending strength is 120 MPa. Beech's impact toughness is 15-20% higher than oak's, making it more resistant to dynamic loads.

Beech's texture is uniform, fine-pored, without large inclusions. Its natural color is pinkish-cream, very neutral. This neutrality is beech's main advantage for staining and painting. Stains apply evenly, without blotching, creating a clean color without textural interference.

Beech's formability is unique. After steaming at 100-110°C, the wood becomes pliable. The minimum bending radius is 8-10 times the workpiece thickness. A workpiece with a 40 mm cross-section can be bent to a radius of 320-400 mm without fiber breakage. This allows for creating curved furniture legs, bent architraves for arched openings.

Beech's disadvantages: hygroscopicity (actively absorbs and releases moisture, which can cause deformation with humidity fluctuations) and lower biological resistance (requires protective treatment).

Comparative characteristics table

Parameter European oak Eastern beech
Density, kg/m³ 650-750 620-680
Janka hardness, kN 5.5 4.9
Bending strength, MPa 105 120
Moisture resistance High Medium
Formability Low High
Texture Pronounced Homogeneous
Biostability High (tannins) Medium
Price, relative 1.5-2×
Service life, years 50-100 30-50





The choice between oak and beech depends on priorities: maximum durability and status — oak; optimal price-quality ratio, bending capability — beech.

Visual unity: connection between architraves and legs

When decorative door architraves and furniture legs are made from the same wood species, in the same style, with identical surface treatment, visual harmony of the interior is achieved.

Principle of material continuum

Human vision perceives an interior as a set of material fields. Wood forms one field, metal another, textiles a third. The more wooden elements in a room (architraves, baseboards, furniture legs, shelves, picture frames), the stronger the wood's material field, and the more cohesive the interior is perceived.

If architraves are made of light beech and furniture legs of dark oak — the fields are broken, harmony is disrupted. If all elements are made of beech, tinted to a unified 'medium walnut' shade — the field is unified, the interior is harmonious.

Stylistic Consistency

The profile of the architrave should echo the shape of the furniture legs. Flat rectangular architraves + square minimalist legs = stylistic unity of a modern interior. Profiled architraves with classical moldings + turned legs with rings = consistency of a classic interior. Carved architraves with floral ornamentation + carved legs with acanthus leaves = visual rhyme of a historical interior.

Style inconsistency destroys integrity. Baroque carved architraves plus laconic square furniture legs create visual dissonance, eclectic chaos instead of a thoughtful composition.

Color harmonization

Even products made from the same wood species can vary in shade due to different timber harvesting times, differences in processing. Professional manufacturers control color uniformity within a batch, but differences between batches are inevitable.

When architraves and legs are ordered from the same manufacturer simultaneously, they are made from timber of the same batch, tinted with the same stains, coated with the same varnishes. Color matching is maximized. If you order architraves from one supplier, and six months later legs from another, achieving an identical shade is almost impossible.

Comprehensive order: logistics and economics

Ordering trim for doorways and furniture supports as a single kit from one supplier offers many advantages.

Logistical benefits

Single delivery instead of multiple ones saves transportation costs. Delivery of 100 kg of cargo from one supplier costs, for example, 2000 rubles. Delivery of two 50 kg shipments from different suppliers — 2×1500 = 3000 rubles. Savings: 1000 rubles.

Single receipt date simplifies planning of installation work. No need to wait for legs if architraves have already arrived, or vice versa. Everything arrives simultaneously, installation begins immediately on all fronts.

Single packaging reduces the risk of damage. A professional supplier packs all elements on one protected pallet, where long architraves and short legs are optimally distributed. If elements arrive from different suppliers, each packs their cargo their own way, increasing volume and complicating transportation.

Economic advantages

Volume discount. Most manufacturers offer progressive discounts: order up to 50 thousand rubles — base price; 50-100 thousand — 5% discount; 100-200 thousand — 10% discount; over 200 thousand — 15% discount. A comprehensive order (architraves for 5 doors + extensions + legs for 6 furniture items) easily exceeds 100 thousand, providing a discount of 10-15 thousand.

Savings on delivery were calculated above — on average 30-40% of delivery cost when consolidating shipments.

Reduction of overhead costs. One contract instead of several, one invoice, one acceptance, one work completion certificate (if installation is ordered). Saving time for accounting, legal, and management staff — this is also money.

Consultative support

Specialists of a company offering comprehensive solutions see the project as a whole. They will advise:

  • What architrave width is optimal for doors of a given size in rooms of a given height

  • What leg cross-section will support the weight of a specific sideboard with dishes

  • How to coordinate the architrave profile and leg shape for stylistic unity

  • What tint shade will create harmony with existing flooring and furniture

Such expert support is invaluable for those who are not professional designers.

Technical design of a comprehensive order

How to correctly form an order to get everything needed without shortages or excess?

Stage 1: Measurements and inventory

Doorways. Walk through the apartment/house, make a list of all doorways requiring framing. For each opening, measure:

  • Doorway height from floor to top of frame

  • Doorway width (distance between vertical frame posts)

  • Wall thickness (for extension calculation)

  • Door frame width

Standard doorway height of 2000 mm requires:

  • 2 vertical architraves 2200 mm long (with trimming allowance)

  • 1 horizontal architrave 1000-1200 mm long (depends on doorway width)

For framing on both sides multiply by 2.

Furniture. Make a list of case furniture requiring legs. For each item determine:

  • Case dimensions (width, depth, height)

  • Approximate weight of case with contents

  • Desired leg height (based on ergonomics and style)

  • Required number of legs (usually 4-6)

Step 2: Choosing style and material

Determine the overall interior style. This affects:

For classic interiors: profiled or carved oak solid wood architraves, turned or carved furniture legs, tinting in noble shades (walnut, mahogany, fumed oak).

For modern interiors: flat rectangular architraves 70-80 mm wide, square or conical legs, natural light wood color or painting in white, gray.

For Scandinavian style: simple geometric shapes, beech or light oak, transparent oil-wax coating preserving natural texture.

Step 3: Calculating material quantities

Architraves. Standard architrave length is 2200 mm (for doors 2000 mm high). One doorway on one side requires 2.5 architraves (2 vertical + 1 horizontal = 2×2.2 + 1×1.0 = 5.4 linear meters, which corresponds to 2.45 standard sticks 2.2 m long). Considering waste for miter cuts, order 3 architraves per doorway on one side.

For five doors with framing on both sides: 5 doors × 2 sides × 3 architraves = 30 architraves 2.2 m each.

Extensions. If wall thickness is 250 mm, frame width is 80 mm, required extension width is: 250 - 80 - 10 (rebate) - 5 (architrave overhang) = 155 mm. Nearest standard size is 150 mm.

For one doorway on both sides requires: 2 vertical extensions × 2 sides = 4 extensions 2200 mm long + 2 horizontal extensions 1000 mm long. Total per doorway: 4×2.2 + 2×1.0 = 10.8 linear meters of extension.

For five doors: 5 × 10.8 = 54 linear meters of 150 mm wide extension.

Furniture legs. A 1200 mm wide chest of drawers requires 6 legs (4 at corners, 2 intermediate). An 800 mm wide console requires 4 legs. A 1600 mm wide sideboard requires 6 legs. A coffee table requires 4 legs. A 2000 mm long dining table requires 4 legs. A TV stand requires 4 legs.

Total: 6 + 4 + 6 + 4 + 4 + 4 = 28 legs.

Leg height is determined by furniture type: for chests and stands - 120 mm, for tables - 700 mm, for coffee table - 400 mm.

Step 4: Placing the order

Contact the supplier, provide a detailed list:

Door trim molding:

  • Straight architraves 80 mm wide, solid beech — 30 pieces of 2200 mm each

  • Door casing extensions 150 mm wide, solid beech — 54 linear meters

  • Thresholds 80 mm wide, solid beech — 5 pieces of 900 mm each

Furniture supports:

  • Turned round legs with a diameter of 60 mm, height of 120 mm, made of solid beech — 18 pieces

  • Square legs with 80×80 mm cross-section, 700 mm high, solid beech — 4 pieces

  • Tapered legs, 400 mm high, solid beech — 4 pieces

Finish: staining with 'Medium Walnut' stain, coating with matte polyurethane varnish.

Please clarify production time (typically 7-14 business days for standard profiles, 14-21 days for custom), delivery cost, and payment terms.

Installation: mounting architraves and attaching legs

Installation of moldings and furniture supports requires precision but not overly complex tools.

Installing architraves on doors

Tools: miter saw or backsaw with miter box, tape measure, pencil, polyurethane adhesive or 'liquid nails', 40-50 mm finishing nails or pneumatic nailer, wood filler.

Technology:

  1. Measure the height of the door opening from the floor to the top of the frame. Add 10-15 mm for the architrave overhang above the frame. This is the length of the vertical architrave on the long side (from the floor to the outer edge of the top cut).

  2. Cut two vertical architraves with the top end cut at a 45° angle (for joining with the horizontal architrave). The bottom end is straight (rests on the floor).

  3. Place the vertical architraves against the frame with a 5-7 mm overhang from the edge of the frame (this overhang creates a shadow, visually separating the architrave from the wall). Ensure the architraves are perfectly vertical (check with a level).

  4. Apply adhesive to the back of the architrave in a zigzag or dotted pattern. Press the architrave against the wall, secure with finishing nails every 300-400 mm. Sink the nail heads 1-2 mm.

  5. Measure the distance between the inner edges of the vertical architraves. Add double the width of the architrave (so the horizontal architrave overlaps the vertical ones). Cut the horizontal architrave with both ends at 45°.

  6. Install the horizontal architrave, aligning the cuts with the vertical ones. Secure with adhesive and nails.

  7. Fill the recessed nail head spots with wood-tone filler. After drying, sand with fine-grit sandpaper P220-P320.

Installing furniture legs

Tools: drill with a spade bit 8-10 mm in diameter, screwdriver or power drill, 50-70 mm screws, wood glue.

Technology for screw-in legs:

  1. Mark the leg mounting points on the bottom of the furniture carcass. For a rectangular carcass — 4 points set back 50-100 mm from the corners. For a long carcass — additional intermediate points.

  2. Pre-drill a hole 30-40 mm deep in the top end of each leg for a metal threaded insert (threaded bushing). Screw in the insert, sinking it flush with the leg end.

  3. Drill 8-10 mm diameter holes in the marked points on the carcass bottom. Apply a drop of wood glue into the hole.

  4. Screw a 50-70 mm long screw through the carcass bottom into the leg's threaded insert. Tighten firmly but not excessively (to avoid splitting the wood).

Technology for glued legs:

If the leg is attached with glue instead of a screw (for decorative carved legs), use two-component epoxy adhesive. Apply adhesive to the top end of the leg, press against the carcass bottom, secure with a 10-20 kg weight for 24 hours until the adhesive fully cures.

Care and Maintenance

The durability of wooden elements depends on proper care.

Casings and millwork

Weekly dry cleaning with a soft cloth or brush removes dust. Monthly wet cleaning with a slightly damp (well-wrung!) sponge refreshes the surface.

Avoid excessive moisture. Wood is hygroscopic — it absorbs water, swells, shrinks when drying, and may crack. Do not use wet rags or pour water on wooden surfaces.

For polished and varnished surfaces, use furniture polish 2-3 times a year. It creates an additional protective layer, enhances shine, and masks minor scratches.

For oil-wax finishes, renewal is performed every 12-18 months. The surface is lightly sanded with P320 abrasive, a fresh coat of oil is applied, and excess is removed after 15 minutes. The finish is restored.

Furniture Legs

Legs experience constant load, so the stability of fastening is important. Every 6-12 months, check the tightness of screws — with intensive use (frequent furniture movement), they may loosen. Tighten if necessary.

Protective tips (felt or plastic caps on the lower ends of legs) prevent scratches on flooring and reduce noise when moving furniture. Check their condition and replace worn ones.

If a leg is cracked or broken, replace it. Storing spare legs (1-2 pieces from the order) allows for quick repair without a lengthy search for an identical replacement.

Frequently asked questions

What is the correct name for a door plinth — casing or something else?

Door plinth is a colloquial term often used by non-specialists. The correct professional term is casing. Casing is a decorative strip framing a door frame. Plinth is an element covering the joint between wall and floor. There are also extensions — expanders for the frame in thick walls. Three different elements, three different terms.

Can oak casings be combined with beech furniture legs?

Technically possible, but visually it creates a color mismatch due to differences in texture and wood species. Oak has a large-pore structure and dark brown shades, beech is fine-pored and light cream. Even with tinting, the differences are noticeable. For visual harmony, a single wood species is recommended.

What cross-section of legs will support the weight of a heavy sideboard with dishes?

Sideboard weight 100 kg plus 50 kg of dishes = 150 kg total weight. With six legs, the load on each is 25 kg. A leg with a 60×60 mm cross-section made of beech supports 250 kg — a tenfold safety margin. An 80×80 mm leg will support 400 kg. For sideboards, an 80×80 mm cross-section is sufficient; for maximum confidence — 100×100 mm.

Do wooden casings need to be primed before installation?

If casings are supplied already painted/varnished (factory finish), additional priming is not required. If supplied sanded without coating (for self-painting), then after installation and puttying of fastening points, the entire casing must be primed and painted/varnished.

How to choose the height of legs for a sofa?

Standard sofa seat height from the floor is 420-460 mm. If the seat thickness (frame + filler + upholstery) is 120 mm, then the leg height should be 300-340 mm. For low Eastern style, seat height is 350 mm, legs 230 mm. For high Scandinavian style, seat height is 480 mm, legs 360 mm.

Can MDF casings be used with wooden furniture legs?

Yes, but visual harmony will be incomplete. MDF with lamination or veneer imitates wood but differs tactilely (smoother, colder to the touch). Solid wood is warm, with natural texture variation. If budget is limited, MDF casings + wooden legs are an acceptable compromise. If maximum harmony is important — all from solid wood.

How much does a comprehensive order for casings and legs for a three-room apartment cost?

For a three-room apartment, typically 5-7 door openings and 6-8 furniture items requiring legs. Approximate cost: beech casings for 6 doors (both sides) — 35-45 thousand rubles, extensions (if needed) — 15-25 thousand, furniture legs (30-40 pieces of various heights) — 25-40 thousand. Total 75-110 thousand rubles when ordering from one supplier with a volume discount.

What is the production time for a comprehensive order?

Standard casing profiles and typical leg models are usually in stock — shipping in 2-5 business days. Non-standard sizes and custom profiles are made to order — 10-21 business days depending on complexity and production load. Plan a comprehensive order 3-4 weeks before installation work begins.

Is special tooling required for installing casings and legs?

Minimum set: miter saw (or handsaw with miter box for angle cuts), drill with bits, screwdriver, hammer, level, tape measure. Professional level: miter saw with laser guide, pneumatic nail gun for finish nails, router for joint fitting. An amateur can manage with the minimum set; a professional uses everything to speed up and improve quality.

Can millwork and legs in different shades from the same wood species be ordered?

Yes, this is a common practice for zoning interiors. For example, interior door casings — light beech under clear varnish, and furniture legs in the bedroom — the same beech, tinted to 'dark walnut'. The main thing is that the manufacturer guarantees the stability of the tint shade for repeat orders.

Conclusion: professional approach from STAVROS

A comprehensive order of millwork for door openings and furniture supports is not just about saving time and money. It is a systematic approach to creating a harmonious interior, where every detail is coordinated with the overall concept, where materials, forms, and colors work towards a unified image.

For over twenty years, STAVROS has been providing professional solutions for those who understand the value of quality and visual harmony. The STAVROS production line offers a full range of elements for comprehensive interior design.

Moldings, cornices, and baseboards made of solid wood— over 60 profiles of various widths and complexities. Straight flat casings for modern interiors, profiled with classical breaks for neoclassical styles, carved with floral ornaments for historical styles. Each profile is available in solid oak and beech, and can be made from high-density MDF.

wooden furniture legs— over 130 models of all popular styles. Round turned legs with diameters from 40 to 120 mm, square legs with cross-sections from 60×60 to 120×120 mm, tapered, curved, carved. Heights from 80 to 900 mm allow selecting supports for any type of furniture—from coffee tables to tall buffets.

Legs for tables— a specialized category of reinforced supports designed for high loads of dining and work tables. Cross-sections of 80×80, 100×100, 120×120 mm, height 680-730 mm (standard for tables). Load-bearing capacity of one 100×100 mm leg—up to 500 kg of static load.

Extra-height furniture supports— for designer furniture on high legs. Heights of 450-900 mm create visual lightness for massive cabinets, provide access under furniture for robot vacuums, and visually expand the space of small rooms.

All elements are manufactured on high-precision European equipment from wood that has undergone chamber drying to a residual moisture content of 8-10%. This guarantees geometric stability, absence of deformation and cracking during operation. Multi-stage quality control at every stage—from incoming raw material inspection to final packaging—prevents defective products from reaching the market.

A wide stock program ensures availability of popular items and fast shipping from 2 business days. For non-standard sizes and custom profiles, made-to-order production is organized with a lead time of 10-21 business days.

Professional consulting support helps correctly calculate the required amount of materials, select optimal profiles and models, and coordinate style and color palette. STAVROS designers will develop a comprehensive interior design concept with visualization to understand the final result.

The logistics network covers all of Russia and CIS countries. Warehouse terminals in Moscow and St. Petersburg ensure fast shipping to any region. Professional packaging in multi-layer protective materials prevents damage during transportation. For large orders, delivery is organized with our own transport, including unloading and lifting to the floor.

The partnership program for interior designers and architects offers special cooperation terms—professional discounts up to 25%, priority project-based manufacturing, a personal manager, and technical support at all implementation stages.

By choosing a comprehensive solution from STAVROS, you receive not just a set of materials, but a system of interconnected elements that create visual and stylistic harmony in the interior. Quality tested by time—many projects decorated with STAVROS elements 15-20 years ago still retain their original appearance and functionality. Professional service at all stages—from consultation to installation and after-sales support.

Create interiors where every detail is in its place. Invest in solutions that last for decades. Trust the masters of STAVROS—professionals for whom the production of wooden decor is not just a business, but a calling and a responsibility to every client.