A stack of firewood probably has passed and he has not thought about any of that, just trunks waiting for winter. But look more closely and start seeing the possibility. A smooth slice that could be a rustic portion table. A perfect thick round for an auxiliary table. Even rough edges have a kind of charm that you can’t buy in a store.
The point is that wooden trunks have this raw and organic beauty that adapts to almost any place. Traigal them inside, and instantly heat a modern space. Lead them unfinished and tell their own story; Pomelos and feel like something direct of a boutique.
The best part? You do not need advanced tools or a workshop to work.
Think of feces, shelves, planters or candlesticks, each project is a reminder that simpler materials often bring the greatest amount of character to your home.
1. Build rustic garden steps with registration slices
Stacked trunks rounds shape a staircase that feels resistant and intentional. Each cut exposes rich growth rings, adding texture while mixing with surrounding ferns and moss.
Irregular heights make the climb to playful, almost sculptural. Climate records wonderfully over time, obscuring and softening at the edges.
The function meets art here, practical access combined with a strong character of the forest. An intelligent reuse of heavy wood.
2. Build a retaining wall with stacked records

The records double as a structure and style here, forming a retention wall that feels rustic and designed.
Its round ends contrast wonderfully with the smooth river stones at the base, adding a variety of texture.
The staggered placement strengthens the wall while keeping it informal. Spring bulbs and perennial plants soften the upper edge. An ecological and cost savings alternative to concrete or brick.
3. Create a game path with steppes painted trunk

Cutting records become rounds, but the painting makes them playful. The bright blue blouses break the monotony, guiding the children forward as floors in a current.
The height variation adds challenge, balance, movement. The texture of the cortex contrasts with smooth painted grain, so each step feels deliberate.
Functional piece of the recess, yes, but also an ingenious landscape that fosters exploration and fun.
4. Cover a tree bump with a flashlight for the environmental brightness

An old stump changes dead weight to design anchor. Its twisted cortex, full of ridges and scars, becomes a pedestal for a flashlight equipped with solar panels.
The natural base meets the modern function, the clean geometry of the earth of the Earth of the glass and metal wood grains.
The matching feels balanced, rustic but current. An intelligent lamp form without concrete pouring.
5. Streak hollow records on a rustic planter screen

The grouped records form a staggered structure, each hollow to support small plants. The worn bark provides texture, while moss and vegetation soften the edges.
The stones in the base anchor the group, tieding wood to ground. The flat rocks stacked on the top add balance, almost sculptural.
The configuration feels wild and intentional, a natural pedestal for low maintenance flowers.
6. Surround a tree bump with a garden with stone edges

A cut registration is transformed into a centerpiece, framed by a circle of rough stones. The plants spill around the edges, mixing bark, leaf and rock textures.
The base stump in the design, almost like exterior furniture, while flowers add softness. A young tree rises close, linking old wood with new growth.
It is a simple disposition, but in layers of meaning.
7. Illuminate a forest path with hollow trunk flashlights

The records become more than seats when they hue to hold the warm light. Glow escapes at ground level, guiding steps without a hard glow.
The rough cortex maintains the raw appearance, mixing perfectly in the forest configuration. Each stump feels like sculpture, in functional part, atmospheric part.
It is a subtle drama, a low technology design with a surprisingly high impact after dusk.
8. CRAFT A patio table of a solid registration base

Here a trunk slab is transformed into a dining surface, its raw edge preserved for character. The base of the cortex feels heavy, almost sculptural, based on brick cobblestone configuration.
The grain patterns through the table bring heat, while a bright umbrella above shit changes from humor to a holiday.
It is resistant, practical, but undeniably artistic, a trunk given the second outdoor life.
9. Forms a garden bank from a fallen trunk

Here a stump extends to a seat, turning the decomposition into utility. The rough wood carries deep cracks, full of character, while margaritas soften their edges.
Wild flowers are woven through the holes, the blurred line between furniture and landscape.
It feels organic, almost accidental, but perfectly located. A seat, a pot, a story in wood, quiet and functional poetry in the meadow.
10. Use registration stools around a concrete table for natural contrast

Cutting records serve as seats, their rough cortex and cracks softening the elegant concrete table in the center. The churid floor cover keeps drainage clean while highlighting rustic textures.
The combination is intelligent and raw of wood against soft cement, natural against industrial.
Compact, durable, easy to move. It turns a small patio into an elegant and elegant outdoor dining corner.
11. Fore a forest road with trunks with chicolate

Here the wood takes new form, shattered in mulch that defines a winding garden path. The texture is lazy, unequal, but easy to walk, naturally mixing with the roots and the floor of the trees.
The flowers border on each side, their bright reds and roses that hit warm fries. It is simple, affordable and practical,
Delete weeds while adding visual heat to shaded spaces.
12. frame a garden input with a rustic registration door

A rough branch wood door converts a stone path into an invitation. The vertical sticks maintain the open shape, the air flows, while their irregular lines soften the hard stone walls.
Ivy covers on top, the structure tied to nature. Beyond, a mountain view extends, giving the purpose of the door as a threshold and frame. Simple, but surprisingly poetic records when used in this way.