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Woodgrain Millwork
Todd Dame runs family-owned Woodgrain Millwork, a vertically integrated building-products group with six divisions and 34 facilities across the US and...
Woodgrain Millwork
At Woodgrain, we offer thousands of unique wood products ranging from moulding to top quality doors. Our products are the essential elements to creating an extraordinary home.
General information
Firm type
Single Family Office
Year founded
1954
AUM
Undisclosed
Location
Region
North America
Country
United States
City
Fruitland
Corporate office
Fruitland, ID, United States
Additional offices
Nampa, ID · Lawrenceville, GA · West Des Moines, IA · Meridian, ID · Los Angeles, Chile
Principals
Bud Dame
Founder
Reed Dame
Former CEO
Kelly Dame
Former CEO
Todd Dame
President & CEO
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
Who controls Woodgrain Millwork?
The Dame family has owned and operated the company since Bud Dame founded it in 1954. Ownership passed to his son Reed in 1974, then to Kelly Dame in 2009. The third generation now leads the firm, with Todd Dame serving as President and CEO.
How does Woodgrain's vertical integration work in practice?
Woodgrain procures logs, mills them into lumber at its own sawmills, and sends the lumber to its remanufacturing plants for conversion into moulding, door components, and window parts. It owns the distribution warehouses and a private trucking fleet, Woodgrain Transportation LLC. Even sawdust becomes a product, pressed into heating pellets and animal bedding under the Nature's brand, with the firm reporting that more than 99% of its timber fiber is used.
What is Woodgrain's relationship with Lowe's?
Woodgrain acquired two Lowe's door shops — in Lexington, North Carolina and Whitehouse, Tennessee — in 2021. These facilities operate as part of Woodgrain's Doors division, supplying interior and exterior door products. The acquisition reflects a strategy of buying captive downstream capacity rather than competing on a contract-manufacturing basis.
Does Woodgrain Millwork take outside capital or invest in external funds?
There is no public evidence that Woodgrain accepts outside equity capital or has formed pooled investment vehicles. The firm appears to fund operations and acquisitions entirely through its own balance sheet, and all known capital deployment is directed toward expanding its family of manufacturing and distribution businesses.
How has Woodgrain expanded internationally?
The firm entered Chile in 1997 through a partnership with moulding manufacturer Promasa and built a door plant there in 2003. In 2021, Woodgrain acquired 100% ownership of Promasa, converting the joint venture into a wholly owned subsidiary. The Los Angeles, Chile facility now produces moulding and doors for South American markets.
What is the scale of Woodgrain's distribution network?
Woodgrain lists 34 combined distribution warehouses and door shop locations serving its customers. The network expanded significantly with the 2022 acquisition of Huttig Building Products — a publicly traded distributor — and the 2023 purchase of Trimco Millwork, which added coverage in the Rocky Mountain West.
Does Woodgrain operate any philanthropic foundations?
The firm's public disclosures emphasize sustainability and operational stewardship, but no separate philanthropic foundation is identified on its website or in available records. Charitable giving, if any, appears to be conducted privately.
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