Metal fabrication is the process of cutting, bending, joining, and shaping metal to create custom parts, structures, or finished products. We cut, shape, and build that from raw materials—start to finish.
Handcrafted shaping
Forging involves shaping metal using compressive forces, typically with hammers, presses, or dies, and often while the metal is heated.
It's one of the oldest metalworking techniques and is used to create both artistic and highly functional pieces.
Subtractive shaping
Machining is a process used to shape and finish materials—usually metal or wood—by removing material from a larger block (called a “blank” or “workpiece”).
This is called subtractive shaping, because we’re taking material away to create the final form.
Rotational cutting
Turning is a machining process where a piece of metal is spun on a machine called a lathe, while a cutting tool shapes it.
It shapes round or cylindrical parts (like rods, pins, knobs, shafts, threads, or rings).
It can make Smooth, uniform surfaces, Tapered or curved shapes or Threads.
Creating holes
Drilling is the process of creating holes in metal using a rotating cutting tool called a drill bit. It's like using a power drill at home—but with much more precision and power when working with metal.
If you're mounting a handle on a metal gate or adding hardware to a bracket, drilling is how we create the holes—clean, precise, and ready to use .
Multi-point cutting
Milling is a machining process where a rotating cutting tool removes material from a solid piece of metal to create flat surfaces, grooves, slots, angles, or custom shapes.
Think of it like a very precise sculpting tool that shaves away layers of metal—kind of like a high-speed chisel guided by a machine.
We use cookies to analyze website traffic and optimize your website experience. By accepting our use of cookies, your data will be aggregated with all other user data.