About

It's all about the ingredients!
At Wolfwood, we carefully harvest and dry our wood to reveal its natural aroma and beauty. All of our woods are milled on Vancouver Island, with a significant portion sourced from reclaimed materials such as wind-fallen trees and land-clearing recoveries.

Correct drying & aging = AROMA
Our rough-cut lumber is stacked and slow-dried over time to preserve its deepest natural aromas. In the surrounding forest, chanterelle mushrooms and other exotics flourish in the same nutrient-rich ecosystem—an environment that subtly shapes the character of our wood.
Shaping
Shaping is where tradition meets technology. Carefully selected wood is assembled in rough form, then precision-milled on our custom-built CNC machine. This allows us to refine natural material with modern accuracy, unlocking consistent form, refined surfaces, and performance that cannot be achieved by hand alone.

Finishing
Finishing is where it all comes together. With the right wood selected and every component precisely fitted, we apply a food-safe protective coating and natural wax lining. Each Wolfwood piece is individually inspected and, once approved, numbered and recorded—no two are alike, shaped by the unique grain of the wood and its natural balance of aroma.

AromaDor Technology
Patent Pending
Every Wolfwood Beer Drinkware comes with a AromaDor cedar storage box, made from the same Western Red Cedar as the beerware. The box naturally transfers cedar aroma molecules back into the beeswax, recharging the scent between uses.

On its way to you - in cedar shavings
We do everything possible to avoid disposable plastic in our packaging, including how we protect Wolfwood products during shipping. Instead of plastic fillers, we use clean, aromatic wood shavings that would otherwise be discarded.
Made entirely from Western Red Cedar and Big Leaf Maple, these shavings are 100% natural, smell incredible, and can even be reused in your AromaDor to refresh and enhance aroma recharge.
We do apologize if opening your package is a little messy—but that’s the sound (and smell) of real wood at work.

