Grainwork Blog

Thoughts on cabinet software.

Manufacturing, software, and building Grainwork — from the team.

6 articles

We’re Not Building an AI That Designs Your Kitchen

We’re Not Building an AI That Designs Your Kitchen

Every cabinet software company wants to talk about AI right now. But cabinet design is not a creative writing task. A cabinet has to go together in the real world. Grainwork’s AI direction is not about replacing designers. It is about helping them navigate rules, configuration, and troubleshooting faster, without asking them to trust a black box.

Myron WittmerMyron Wittmer
Standard Base Is Not a Name

Standard Base Is Not a Name

Not every shop cares about SKUs, and that is fine. But almost every shop benefits from cabinet names that tell you what you are looking at. “Standard base” does not mean much after the cabinet has been modified twelve times. A name should describe what got built.

Myron WittmerMyron Wittmer
The Catalog Is the Wrong Place to Start

The Catalog Is the Wrong Place to Start

Legacy cabinet software often starts with a catalog, then piles on folders and subfolders to keep it organized. That may have made sense once. But for real shops, it usually turns into a mess nobody trusts. Grainwork is being built to start with types and presets instead, because shops build cabinets. They do not manage libraries.

Myron WittmerMyron Wittmer
Collaboration In Software Should Feel Normal

Collaboration In Software Should Feel Normal

Legacy software made collaboration feel like a workaround. Grainwork is meant to change that by letting the whole job live in one place, so your team, your customer, and even outside drafters can all work from the same source of truth instead of chasing “final_final_v18.pdf.”

Myron WittmerMyron Wittmer
The Problem With Letting One Person Be the System

The Problem With Letting One Person Be the System

Every shop has had this person. The one who knows how everything works. They built the setup, figured out the exceptions, and became the person everyone depended on. Then they leave. And the shop learns the hard way that a great person is not the same thing as a great system.

Myron WittmerMyron Wittmer
Why Cabinet Shops Get Stuck Depending on Consultants

Why Cabinet Shops Get Stuck Depending on Consultants

A lot of cabinet shops think they bought software. What they really bought was a system they can’t fully change without calling somebody else. That dependency costs more than the support bill.

Myron WittmerMyron Wittmer