Types and examples of use
First, the big picture
We design complete systems: arches with keystones, exterior corbels on the house for balance, and exterior decorative brackets for rhythm. Every facade has its own story — sometimes you need bold large exterior corbels visible from the street, sometimes subtle architectural exterior corbels that reveal themselves up close.
Gables and eaves
Exterior gable corbels define rooflines, anchor the visual axis, and make structures feel grounded. Exterior soffit corbels set rhythm and balance.
In Panama City, a rural school needed presence — something that gave it weight without making it feel like a museum. After adding corbels and framing the arched doorways, the building felt “steadier,” like a quiet but confident voice among its surroundings.
Entrances and portals
Exterior corbels and brackets shape the first impression at entry points. Add exterior corner brackets, and even a simple door feels welcoming.
A manor near Savannah, used for weddings, wanted a sense of tradition. We designed a tall keystone arch and decorative exterior brackets with a grapevine motif — guests now line up to take photos under it.
Handrails, stairs, terraces
On a waterfront walkway in St. Pete Beach, we used exterior architectural brackets with built-in LED pockets — soft, inviting light at night, clean lines by day.