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My Father Gathered 22 People Every Summer for 41 Years Without a Single Phone at the Table. He Died in 2019. I’m Shipping His Secret This Summer for $99 Direct

Found & Made investigates why a 63-year-old Burgundy craftsman is bypassing every American retailer this summer and why every testimonial he gets from an American kitchen describes the same moment: 

 

Someone at the table put their phone down without being asked.

By Albert Grace, Staff Writer at Found & Made, June 7, 2026

Jean-Pierre Renard sets a walnut board on the table his father built in 1961 and takes one step back.

 

The board glows amber in the morning light coming through the workshop window. Outside, the Morvan forest covers the hills above Autun in deep June green. The workshop smells of walnut and oil. Stacked along the back wall, wrapped in linen, are 200 boards exactly like this one, and the last he'll ship directly to American homes before summer ends.

 

He's been making boards for 29 years. He's never been able to explain, simply, what they're for.

 

Until now.

"My father held 22 people around this table every July for 41 years…"

"Nobody checked a phone once. Not once. Last July I sat at that same table with eleven family members and counted four phones out within twenty minutes."

 

He sets his hand flat on the walnut.

 

"Then I put a board on the table. The phones went down. Not because I asked. Because something in the wood is still stronger than the screen." He looks up. "That's what I've been making for five years. That's what I'm shipping to America this summer."

 

Jean-Pierre Renard is 63, a third-generation woodworker from Autun in the heart of Burgundy. His grandfather built furniture. His father made boards from Morvan walnut offcuts for the families of Saône-et-Loire. Jean-Pierre has run the workshop since 1997. This summer, 200 of those boards are leaving his bench at $99 each, shipped direct to American homes.

 

Williams-Sonoma sells a comparable walnut board for $249. 

 

Crate & Barrel lists theirs at $199. 

 

Jean-Pierre set his price the morning after his father's funeral, finally understanding what his father had been doing at that table for four decades.

How Jean-Pierre Inherited a Craft That Began in 1961

Jean-Pierre didn't choose walnut. His father Gaston chose it for him, the way fathers in Burgundy choose most things: quietly, without announcement, simply by doing it in front of you until it becomes yours.

 

Gaston started making boards in 1961, the year he converted the barn behind the farmhouse into a workshop. He'd trained as a master carpenter and spent his twenties building roof frames across Saône-et-Loire. But every winter, when the structural work slowed, he'd take the walnut offcuts that piled up in the corner (too irregular for joinery, too beautiful for the fire) and turn them into boards.

 

He didn't make them to sell. He made them to give away. Every birth in the village got a board. Every wedding, every new house. For thirty years, if you moved into a home in the hills above Autun, there was a good chance Gaston had already knocked on your door with a walnut board under his arm.

 

"He never asked if people wanted one," Jean-Pierre says. "He just showed up. He said a kitchen without a real board was a kitchen that didn't know what it was yet."

 

By age twelve, Jean-Pierre was spending winter evenings in the barn with Gaston: sanding, oiling, and learning to read the grain. Gaston taught him how to find the figure inside a raw slab and how to let the live edge tell the story of the original trunk.

 

"Every tree has a center," Gaston used to say. "Your job is to find it and not cut through it."

 

In 1997, Gaston handed Jean-Pierre the workshop. By 2018, his boards were in professional kitchens across France. Then June 2019 arrived, and the forty-one Julys Gaston had held together came to an end.

22 People, 41 Years, No Invitations… and Nobody Ever Left Early

Every July from 1968 to 2018, Gaston Renard set a walnut board on the long table in the farmhouse kitchen and kept it there from noon until dark.

 

There were no invitations, no headcount. Gaston would load the board with whatever the week had offered (a wedge of Époisses from the market in Beaune, dry-cured sausage, bread, whatever fruit was on the counter), open a bottle of wine, and sit down.

 

Within two hours, twenty-two people were in the kitchen. Year after year. Same neighbors, same cousins, same friends from the farms above town. Children who had grown up and moved to Paris would find themselves at Gaston's table by early afternoon without having planned to be there. The meals lasted four, five, sometimes six hours. Nobody left early. Nobody said they were busy.

 

"I spent my whole adult life trying to understand why," Jean-Pierre says.

 

He pulls the board closer on the workbench.

 

"It wasn't my father. He was a quiet man. Didn't tell stories. Wasn't funny. He sat at the end of the table and refilled glasses and barely talked." He stops. "It was the board. When something that warm and that real is in the center of the table, your body leans in. You want to reach for it. You want to be near it. My father knew that. He just never explained it."

 

Jean-Pierre learned what Gaston knew in August 2019, at a table that had a ceramic dish where the board used to be.

The Wood That Takes 100 Years to Grow and 18 Months to Dry

The Morvan plateau is the least hospitable forest in France. The soil is thin and acidic. The winters are long. Walnut trees grow slowly here: a trunk that reaches board width takes 80 to 120 years. That slow growth produces wood that's denser and more figured than the fast-grown walnut from commercial flatland mills filling American stores.

 

Jean-Pierre sources all his walnut from two family-owned mills within 40 kilometers of Autun. He air-dries every slab for a minimum of 18 months in the barn (outside, through a full Burgundy winter) so the wood finishes moving before it ever touches a blade.

 

"American boards are kiln-dried and sold in under two months," he says. "That wood is still deciding what it wants to be when it reaches your kitchen. Mine have already made every decision they're going to make. That's why they don't warp."

 

The process from slab to finished board takes three hours of bench work spread over two weeks. Jean-Pierre cuts a single slab (never glued from smaller pieces) at 22 millimeters thick. He works through four grits of sandpaper, finishing at 320, until the surface has a warmth a machine finish can't replicate. Two coats of walnut oil cold-pressed 18 kilometers from the workshop, 24 hours apart. A final hand-buffed coat of beeswax.

 

The last pass takes 35 minutes per board. Jean-Pierre does it standing at the same bench where his father stood.

 

When the oil and wax hit Morvan walnut, the grain comes alive. It doesn't shine the way lacquered boards do. It glows. In the light of a kitchen at 6 p.m. in July, it looks like it's generating its own warmth.

 

"I've finished more than 600 boards in this workshop. I know the moment a board is right because I stop seeing a piece of wood and start seeing the table it belongs on. The grain either speaks or it doesn't. I only ship the ones that speak."

The July His Father Was Gone and the Table Had No Center

Gaston Renard died on June 14, 2019, at 82. Heart failure. He had been declining since February. Jean-Pierre had spent four months making the drive from Autun to the farmhouse every other day to sit with him.

 

When Gaston died, Jean-Pierre closed the workshop for six weeks.

 

"My father was the reason I understood what a board was for. Without him, I didn't know who I was making them for anymore."

 

The family gathered at the farmhouse in mid-July: twelve people around the table Gaston had built in 1961. Jean-Pierre had set it the way Gaston always had: cheese, sausage, bread, a bottle of Burgundy. But Gaston's board had gone to his eldest daughter Sylvie after the funeral. She had driven back to Lyon with it in the trunk of her car, and nobody had asked her not to.

 

There was a ceramic dish in the center where the board used to be.

 

Within twenty minutes, Jean-Pierre's granddaughter Emma (15 that summer) had her phone under the table. His nephew was checking something on his screen, his thumb scrolling while his eyes stayed half on the conversation. His own son had placed his phone face-up next to his plate, the screen lighting up the way everyone's does now, without thinking, without meaning to be rude.

Jean-Pierre sat at the end of the table (Gaston's seat) and said nothing.

 

"When my father was here, none of that happened," he says. "Not once in forty-one years. People's hands were on the table. They were leaning in, looking at each other and at the board." He stops. "I had watched it for forty years without understanding that it was the board doing it, not my father. My father was just the one who put the board there."

 

He drove home that evening and went straight to the workshop.

 

He didn't make a board to sell. He made one to test something. Six weeks later, at a family dinner at his own house, he put the finished board on the table before anyone sat down and loaded it the way Gaston always had: cheese, sausage, the bread Emma liked from the bakery near the church.

 

Emma sat down. She reached for her phone the way she always did. Then her hand touched the board instead. She ran her fingers across the grain. She set her phone face-down.

 

She didn't pick it up again for three hours.

 

"She didn't make a decision," Jean-Pierre says. "The board made it for her. The walnut was warmer and more real than the glass in her pocket. That's all. But that's everything."

 

He was back at the workshop the next morning.

The Article That Brought American Families to His Door

Jean-Pierre had shipped a handful of boards to the U.S. before 2020. In 2022, a food writer from Portland named Claire Nakamura spent three weeks driving through Burgundy researching disappearing European food crafts. She spent an afternoon in the workshop, watched Jean-Pierre finish two boards, and asked him why he made them. He told her about Gaston's table. He told her about Emma and the phone.

She published the piece in September 2022. The emails from American readers started arriving the following week.

 

What struck Jean-Pierre wasn't the volume. It was what the letters said. Almost every one described the same problem: a family table where nobody was fully present anymore. A Fourth of July gathering where it felt like everyone was somewhere else at the same time they were there. A summer dinner where the real conversation lasted eleven minutes before the screens came back out.

 

"They weren't writing to me about a cutting board," he says. "They were writing to me about a table that had lost its center. I knew exactly what they meant. I'd been sitting at that table in 2019."

 

By 2025, the waiting list had reached 200 names. In March 2026, he decided to clear the full workshop inventory in a single direct summer release.

Why Jean-Pierre Is Selling 200 Boards Direct Instead of Through a Retailer

In February 2026, a buyer from a national American specialty retailer offered to carry all 200 boards across twelve stores at a retail price of $299. Jean-Pierre would receive $51 per board. The retailer would clear nearly $50,000 on his work.

 

He declined before the email was finished.

 

"A board behind glass in a store doesn't do what a board does at a table," he said. "My father didn't give boards to every family in Autun so they could be displayed. A retailer doesn't care about that. A retailer cares about the margin between $51 and $299."

 

His price: $99 direct from Autun, shipped to American homes before Labor Day. The lowest he could go and still pay his two part-time assistants honestly.

 

Williams-Sonoma charges $249 for a walnut board made from glued composite strips with a lacquer finish. Crate & Barrel lists theirs at $199. Neither was made by one person who air-dried the slab for 18 months and finished it by hand.

 

Neither smells like a Burgundy workshop in June.

 

The price gap between $99 and $249 is not a quality gap. 

 

It's the distance between a craftsman and a catalog.

Voices From American Tables

When word of Jean-Pierre's direct summer release reached past American customers in early 2026, the letters that arrived in Autun weren't about the wood. They were about what happened to the table.

 

"We bought a board from Jean-Pierre in 2023 for my mother-in-law's birthday. She's hosted our Fourth of July gathering for 28 years. Last summer was the first time in years we made it through dinner without someone reaching for their phone. She didn't say a word about it — she just put the board in the center of the table that morning. At one point I looked around and counted eleven people actually there. I hadn't seen that in years." 

— Patricia Osei, Atlanta, Georgia

 

"I have a 16-year-old daughter who hasn't made it through a family meal without checking her phone in three years. I put the board on the table at Easter. She picked it up before she picked up her fork, ran her fingers across the grain for about a minute, and her phone stayed in her room for the entire meal. I didn't say a word. I just watched it happen." 

— Michael Torres, Denver, Colorado

 

"We started hosting Sunday dinners when we moved into our house in 2021. People always drifted after two hours. We put the board on the table in September 2023 and people stopped leaving. Last November, eight of us sat there from 6 p.m. until nearly midnight. My husband said the board changed the physics of the room. I think he's right." 

— Jennifer Walsh, Chicago, Illinois

 

In April 2026, after Jean-Pierre's direct sale spread across several American food communities, a European craft association offered him a featured spot at a transatlantic artisan fair in New York City in September.

 

He declined. "A fair is one weekend," he said. "A board is forty years on a family table. I'd rather know these boards are in American kitchens than be standing in New York explaining what they're for."

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5 Reasons This Board Will Outlive Your Kitchen

Single-slab Morvan walnut, air-dried 18 months. Cut from one continuous piece of slow-grown French walnut — never glued from segments. Air-dried through a full Burgundy winter so it's already made every movement it will ever make. Williams-Sonoma's boards are kiln-dried composite strips. Their seams open in 5 to 8 years. This board has no seams.

 

Live edge on both sides, never routed. The natural contour of the tree, kept intact on both long sides. No routing, no machine radius. The edge this board ships with is the edge the tree grew over 80 to 100 years in the Morvan. No two boards have the same edge. The board you receive does not exist in a catalog.

 

Cold-pressed walnut oil and beeswax, applied by hand. Oil cold-pressed at a mill 18 kilometers from the workshop. Beeswax sourced locally. No lacquer, no polymer topcoat. The finish smells like a Burgundy kitchen in summer — and every time you re-oil it, for the rest of your life, it'll smell that way again.

 

Documented 20-year lifespan in active kitchens. Of the boards Jean-Pierre shipped between 2003 and 2008, more than 300 are confirmed still in daily use. No splitting, no warping, no replacement boards. The only maintenance: a light coat of oil every few months.

 

Made entirely by hand, start to finish. No CNC, no factory, no composite parts. Every board is made in one workshop in Autun by Jean-Pierre and two assistants. The board you receive was touched at every stage by the hands that made it. That's not a feature. It's the difference between something manufactured and something made.

 

>> Claim Yours Before the Batch Is Gone <<

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141 Boards Left, They Won't Be Restocked

As of this morning in Autun, 141 of the 200 boards remain. Jean-Pierre wraps each one in unbleached linen himself. His assistant Mathieu handles the shipping labels. His daughter Céline checks the order list from Lyon each evening. They're running this the way Gaston ran everything: quietly, on their own terms, without a marketing department.

 

The price of $99 (against Williams-Sonoma's $249 for a glued composite board) is not a summer sale. It's the price a Burgundy craftsman set so his father's walnut could reach American tables directly, not behind glass in a retail store.

 

Every board ships from Autun within 7 business days, customs included, wrapped in linen inside a cardboard sleeve Jean-Pierre cuts and folds himself. 30-day return guarantee for any reason. Return shipping covered from anywhere in the U.S. He's done it three times in 29 years.

 

"My father turns 70 this July. For the past four years, our family's summer dinner for his birthday has followed the same pattern: thirty minutes of real conversation, then the phones come out and the evening quietly dies. I gave him the board this year. He put it on the table the night of his birthday without saying anything about it. We stayed for four hours. My brother flew in from Seattle and said at the end of the night: 'I don't know what was different. Something was just different.' I didn't explain it. The board doesn't need explaining." 

— Sarah Kimura, Boston, Massachusetts

 

"My wife and I moved back to her hometown in Ohio last year to be closer to her aging parents. We've been trying to rebuild the Sunday dinner tradition her mother used to hold before she passed. Nothing felt right until we put the board on the table in March. The first Sunday, her father stayed until 9 p.m. He hadn't done that in four years. He ran his hand across the walnut at the end of the night and said: 'This wood remembers something.' He's 77. He knows what he's talking about." 

— Andrew Reeves, Columbus, Ohio

 

At 7 orders per day, the last board ships in early July, with enough time to reach your door before Labor Day.

 

This board is for the families gathering this summer around a table that's been missing its center. For the hosts who've watched too many summer dinners end early because the screens won. For the grandparents who remember when a meal lasted four hours and can't explain why it no longer does.

 

Gaston Renard held twenty-two people at a Burgundy table every July for forty-one years. He never once asked anyone to put a phone down. He just put a walnut board in the center and was still.

 

The board did the rest.

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