Retired Saddle Series Bar Stools
One-of-one bar stools made from real retired cowboy saddles on an iron base. When one sells, it’s gone. New arrivals about every other month.
Chisholm Trail Saddle Bar Stool
Red Rock Outrider Saddle Bar Stool
Some pieces are "made" — These were "earned".
The Retired Saddle Series Bar Stools are built from authentic, retired cowboy saddles—each with its own scars, tooling, patina, and history—then paired with a solid iron base for daily use at the bar. No two are ever the same, and that’s the point: every stool is a one-of-one artifact with a past life you can see.
Because each saddle is genuine, the leather tone, seat wear, skirt shape, and engraved details will vary from stool to stool. What stays consistent is the standard: a real saddle, carefully mounted, finished cleanly, and built to live in a serious Western home—kitchen islands, ranch bars, private lounges, and trophy-room spaces.
This is a rotating collection. Once a stool is sold, it’s removed from the website. New releases arrive about every other month—so if a particular saddle speaks to you, it’s the kind of piece you don’t “wait on.”
Explore more premium bar stools in our Western Bar Stool Collection. Want this concept built from your own saddle? Start a conversation.
Delivery Details: Shipping & Return Policy and Customer Service & Delivery FAQ.
Western Soul, On The Page
A curated journal for those who live with intention and decorate with meaning.
The One Upgrade Rule: The Single Piece That Changes the Whole Room
Most rooms don’t need a remodel—they need one decision. The One Upgrade Rule shows which single piece to upgrade first (sofa, dining table, rug, coffee table, lighting, or entry console) to transform a Western room fast. Includes a clear decision path, mistakes to avoid, and when custom options make the upgrade truly perfect.
Read moreabout The One Upgrade Rule: The Single Piece That Changes the Whole Room
Western Quiet Luxury on a Calendar: What to Buy First (and Why)
Quiet luxury isn’t just what you buy—it’s the order you buy it in. This Western home calendar shows what to purchase first, second, and third so every piece builds on the last. Learn the right sequence for sofas, dining tables, beds, rugs, lighting, and décor—plus how lead times and delivery planning fit in.
Read moreabout Western Quiet Luxury on a Calendar: What to Buy First (and Why)
Western Living Room Layout: Traffic Flow Tips for Great Rooms and Open Spaces
A western room can look perfect and still feel awkward to live in. This guide explains real traffic flow—walkway spacing, rug sizing, coffee table clearance, and bar stool placement—plus layout blueprints for great rooms and open spaces so your western furniture feels welcoming, comfortable, and easy to move through every day.
Read moreabout Western Living Room Layout: Traffic Flow Tips for Great Rooms and Open Spaces
The Custom Shortcut: The 5 Most Popular Custom Requests (and Exactly What to Ask For)
Custom western furniture doesn’t have to feel complicated. This guide breaks down the 5 most popular custom requests—changing leather, adjusting hide placement, choosing bar stool height and arms, resizing sofas and tables, and making beds platform or adjustable-base friendly—plus the exact words to use so you can get a clear quote and move forward with confidence.
Read moreabout The Custom Shortcut: The 5 Most Popular Custom Requests (and Exactly What to Ask For)
The Western Texture Code: Leather, Hide, Fabric, and the Art of a Balanced Room
Western rooms can tip into “too much” just as easily as “not enough.” This guide decodes how to balance leather, hair-on hide, fabric, wood, and metal—one hero texture at a time—so your living room, bar, dining room, and bedroom feel collected, grounded, and unmistakably Western without slipping into costume.
Read moreabout The Western Texture Code: Leather, Hide, Fabric, and the Art of a Balanced Room
























