1-800-540-905
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1-800-540-9051
Info@HomesteadSupplier.com
7am-4pm Pacific Time Mon-Fri
1-800-540-905
Info@HomesteadSupplier.com
7am-4pm Pacific Time Mon-Fri
1-800-540-9051
Info@HomesteadSupplier.com
7am-4pm Pacific Time Mon-Fri
A poor-quality door is very difficult to overlook once you’ve lived with one. It could be a light barn door that rattles every time you open or close it, a low-quality exterior door that doesn’t provide enough protection from the elements, or your barn door hardware may struggle with the weight of the door. Each one of these issues can ultimately render an otherwise excellent barn door a failure.
The impact of this is even greater for those who own homesteading-style property. The primary purpose of a single door may be to save space and create privacy and protection for a pantry, a workshop, a cabin, a garage, a greenhouse space, or a newly renovated outbuilding.
You may already compare materials carefully when choosing shed kits, greenhouse kits, or chicken coops, and custom doors deserve the same level of scrutiny.
In this review, we will take a look at the top five custom-made wood and barn door suppliers available today by considering the type of material they use, how flexible their designs are, what types of hardware they offer, what type of customer service each supplier offers, and whether their products would fit well in your current or future projects.

Via Unsplash
Before choosing a custom wood door, check the material, door type, hardware, measurements, and whether it is suitable for interior or exterior use. Solid wood, veneer, MDF, and fiberglass are not interchangeable, especially if you want a door that can be refinished later. Hardware also matters with heavier sliding or carriage doors, because the wrong track or hinge setup can make even a beautiful door frustrating to use.
RealCraft is our top pick when it comes to having custom solid wood doors that fit your specific needs, rather than choosing an existing model in a catalog. RealCraft builds, installs, and delivers solid wood front entrance doors, sliding barn doors, interior doors, carriage doors, bifolding garage doors, pocket doors, hardware, and related wood products from its workshop.
RealCraft’s most significant advantage is that it combines traditional solid-wood construction with a completely personalized order process. It is not just about selecting a size from a drop-down list. You can develop a drawing, provide the dimensions for every aspect of the build and project, offer design ideas, and input your project specifications, and RealCraft will create “shop drawings” for approval prior to production starting. This option would be particularly valuable when your opening configuration is different than standard, your contractor requires details as to how things go together, or you want to maintain the character of an older home.
RealCraft also makes its own sliding door hardware in brass and steel, which helps reduce guesswork around compatibility. For heavier doors, that matters. A beautiful slab can become a daily annoyance if the track is underspecified or the hardware feels like an afterthought.
You have a lot of options for types of wood to use, and you can see samples in person before your purchase. Online photos can only tell you so much about grain, color, and finish. RealCraft won’t be the least expensive option, but it will work best for those who are looking for long-lasting quality, made to custom specifications, and that may need refinished at some time in the future.
If you are looking for a well-established company that manufactures wood doors, Simpson Door Co. will be a viable option. They produce a large variety of both interior and exterior wooden doors with many different architectural styles available, including traditional, farmhouse, modern, French, Dutch, and pivot designs.
The brand suits you if you want choice without starting every detail from scratch. You can customize, but the catalog is deep enough to help you visualize the result quickly.
If you are looking for the best option to create sliding barn doors, barn door hardware, pocket doors, exterior doors, interior doors, or many other design-oriented products, then Rustica offers an incredibly large number of options. With such a wide selection of designs (modern, rustic, glass, metal, mirror, bypass, bifold, and exterior rated), you will have no problem finding one that fits your needs. If your goal is to be able to choose from multiple styles, then this could certainly be a viable choice. However, it would also be wise to check the materials used in each product’s construction, the weight capacity, how long before the products ship, and what type of hardware can be used on each product.
Vintage Doors is worth considering if your project leans classic, cottage, Victorian, porch, screen, Dutch, French, or heritage-inspired. The company focuses on handcrafted solid wood doors made to size, including exterior doors, entrance units, sidelights, transoms, pet doors, gates, and three-season porch panels. It is a strong match when you want old-home charm rather than a sleek modern look.
Doors by Decora is best for statement entryways, decorative glass, church doors, estate doors, rustic doors, craftsman styles, and custom wood front doors. The company has a strong focus on artisan detail, including stained and leaded glass. Choose this brand if your entrance needs to feel more architectural. Custom sidelights, transoms, glass, wood, and finish give you plenty of design control.
There is no single best “custom wood door brand” as this will depend on a number of variables, including your opening, budget, local climate conditions, and the amount of control you wish to have over the finished product.
If you want a fully custom solid wood door with compatible hardware and careful drawing approval, RealCraft deserves the top spot. If you want a broader established catalog, Simpson is a reliable name. For barn door style variety, Rustica is easy to explore. Vintage Doors and Doors by Decora suit more traditional or decorative homes.
Measure twice before ordering; ensure that you are getting an exterior or interior-rated door and ask for information regarding lead time, who completes the finishing, who installs the doors, and what options there are regarding hardware compatibility.
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