About Rimuko

Two generations. One shared instinct to make.

Rimuko is a father-and-son workshop based at a quiet homestead surrounded by forest in Lithuania. The name was born from Rimantas, whose return to woodworking became the beginning of the workshop.

More than thirty years ago, Rimantas worked with wooden furniture before life took him into engineering and business. Later in life, tired of work that had become increasingly distant from the act of creating, he returned to the craft that had always brought him the greatest satisfaction: making something genuinely useful with his own hands, knowing it would bring pleasure to someone else.

His son, Mindaugas, has spent his life taking things apart, experimenting with materials, learning new technologies, and building whatever captured his interest. An engineer by education and by nature, he helped develop the machinery, processes, and precision methods that allow Rimuko to create details and designs that would be difficult to achieve through conventional woodworking alone.

Together, they combine practical experience, modern engineering, and a deep respect for the material. Rimantas brings the instinct and perspective of a craftsman returning to a lifelong passion. Mindaugas brings experimentation, technology, and an impatience with ordinary solutions.

From their workshop in the Lithuanian countryside, they create functional wooden objects intended to be used, examined closely, and kept for years. Cutting boards, game boards, keepsakes, toys, and personalized pieces all begin with the same intention: to make something enduring that brings pleasure not only through its appearance, but through the way it becomes part of everyday life.

Our Philosophy

We believe useful objects deserve the same attention as works of art.

A well-made piece should not become less meaningful through use. It should develop character, carry memories, and remain relevant long after passing trends have disappeared. That is why we work with solid hardwoods, permanent inlays, considered proportions, and methods designed around precision and longevity.

We do not make decoration for decoration’s sake. Every detail should belong to the object, every material should serve a purpose, and every piece should reward a closer look.

Made to be used, admired, and passed on.