By Dean Frost, Founder & CEO, Elizabeth Shutters | Manufacturing custom whole basswood shutters in Colton, California since 1981
The best shutter company in California builds its own product from real wood, installs with its own employees, and remains accountable for the result years after the sale. The difference between a manufacturer and a dealer is the difference between a company that controls quality and one that hopes for it. This guide covers the four things that matter most when choosing a shutter company: material, manufacturing, installation accountability, and long-term warranty follow-through.
Every shutter company in California will tell you they sell the best product. The websites look similar. The photography is polished. The consultations are free. From the outside, it can be difficult to tell the difference between a company that manufactures shutters and one that resells them.
That difference shows up after the sale. It shows up when a panel needs adjustment two years in. When a louver pin wears and the tilt rod goes slack. When the finish fades unevenly because the coating wasn’t engineered for the UV exposure on your west-facing windows. That is when you find out whether your shutter company is a manufacturer that can service what it built, or a dealer that has to call someone else.
I’ve been building shutters in California since 1981. I’ve watched hundreds of shutter companies come through this market. The ones that last share a few things in common. The ones that don’t all cut the same corners.
Four things determine whether a shutter company is worth your money and your trust. Everything else is marketing.
The material determines how the shutter performs for the life of the home. It determines how tight the light gaps are, how smoothly the louvers tilt, how well the finish holds in California’s sun, and whether the product can be repaired when something eventually wears.
Whole basswood is the best material for interior shutters. It is the lightest and strongest wood used in shutter manufacturing, achieves the tightest tolerances between panels and frames, takes paint or stain in any color, and can be adjusted, tuned, and repaired over the life of the home. It is the material we have built with exclusively at Elizabeth Shutters since 1981.
Most companies do not build with whole basswood. Many use finger-jointed basswood, which is multiple small pieces of wood glued together and frequently marketed as “solid basswood.” It’s a reasonable material for painted applications, but the glue joints show through any transparent stain and the long-term dimensional stability is different. Understanding the difference between whole basswood and finger-jointed basswood is the single most important thing you can do before accepting a quote.
Below that, you’ll find synthetic and polymer composites (the most aggressively marketed shutter material in California right now), hardwoods that are heavier and harder to work with than basswood, and MDF composites that are the weakest and heaviest option in the category. For the full breakdown, the best material for shutters guide covers every option with honest tradeoffs.
The question to ask any company: Is your product built from whole basswood, finger-jointed basswood, hardwood, synthetic, or composite? If the answer is vague or dressed in proprietary brand names that obscure what the material actually is, that tells you something important.
|
Material |
What It Is |
What to Know |
|
Whole Basswood |
Single continuous piece of basswood, no joints |
Lightest, strongest, tightest tolerances. Takes paint and stain. Repairable for life. |
|
Finger-Jointed |
Small pieces glued together; marketed as “solid basswood” |
Good for painted. Joints show under stain. Less stable long-term. |
|
Synthetic/Polymer |
Engineered plastic composites; proprietary brand names |
Moisture-resistant. Heavier, limited colors, not repairable, not stainable. |
|
MDF/Composite |
Medium-density fiberboard, heaviest option |
Lowest cost. Will not hold tolerances in California climate extremes. Not repairable. |
A shutter company is either a manufacturer or a dealer. A manufacturer controls quality, tolerances, material sourcing, finish engineering, and delivery timeline. A dealer places an order with someone else’s factory and hopes the product arrives built correctly.
Most shutter companies in California are dealers. Some are national franchise operations with locations across the country, none of which manufacture anything. Others are local installers sourcing from offshore factories. The marketing may look identical to a manufacturer’s. The accountability is not.
When a manufacturer builds your shutters, the team that designed the product is the same team that cut the wood, applied the finish, assembled the hardware, and inspected the result before it left the workshop. There is no distance between the quality standard and the finished product. When a dealer sells you shutters, there are at least two companies involved, frequently more, and the person who sold you the product has limited ability to influence how it was built.
Elizabeth Shutters manufactures every shutter and closet door in our own workshop in Colton, California. We control the process from raw basswood to finished panel. That is not a marketing claim. It is the entire operating model, and it is the reason we can stand behind the product for the life of the home.
The third variable is who installs the product. A company that uses its own employees for installation has direct accountability for the result. A company that subcontracts installation has introduced a third party whose incentives, standards, and timelines are separate from the company that sold you the shutters.
Subcontracted installation is the industry norm in California. Most shutter companies, including the largest franchise operations, do not employ their own installers. They hire independent contractors whose quality, care, and follow-through vary from project to project.
The practical consequence is this: if something needs attention after installation, the company that sold you the product has to coordinate with a separate contractor to get someone back to your home. That may take days. It may take weeks. It may not happen at all if the subcontractor has moved on to other work.
Elizabeth Shutters installs every project with our own employees. The same company that built the product is the company that installs it. When something needs adjustment, you call one number. There is one company accountable for the entire result. That is how it should work, and it is increasingly rare in this industry. Learn more about how we work.
Every shutter company offers a warranty. Very few offer a warranty that means anything five or ten years in.
The questions that matter: Who services the warranty? Is it the same company that manufactured and installed the product, or a different entity? Does the warranty cover adjustment, hardware replacement, and finish touch-up, or only catastrophic failure? Can the company actually perform the repair, or will they tell you the product needs to be replaced entirely because it was built from a material that cannot be serviced at the component level?
Whole basswood shutters can be repaired. Worn louver pins, detached tilt rods, loose hinges, and tension issues can all be resolved with a service visit. Composite and synthetic shutters are often impossible to repair at the component level. The shutter repair and maintenance guide covers what’s repairable and what isn’t, regardless of brand.
Elizabeth Shutters backs every product with a limited lifetime warranty. The company that built the product, installed it, and will be here to service it is the same company, operating from the same facility in Colton, California, as it has since 1981.
|
|
Manufacturer |
Local Dealer |
National Franchise |
|
Builds the product |
Yes, in own facility |
No, sources from factory |
No, sources from factory |
|
Controls material |
Yes |
Limited influence |
Specified by corporate |
|
In-house installation |
Typically yes |
Varies |
Usually subcontracted |
|
Warranty service |
Direct from builder |
Depends on factory |
Through franchise, not factory |
|
Custom shapes |
Full capability |
If factory supports |
Limited to catalog |
|
Stain-grade wood |
Yes, whole basswood |
Depends on source |
Rarely available |
1. What is the shutter material, specifically? Whole basswood, finger-jointed basswood, hardwood, synthetic, or composite? If the salesperson can’t answer this precisely, or hides behind a proprietary name, that is not a company that wants you to understand what you’re buying.
2. Do you manufacture the shutters, or are you reselling another company’s product? There is no wrong answer here, but it changes the accountability structure. A dealer is adding a layer between you and the builder. A manufacturer is the builder.
3. Who installs the shutters: your employees or subcontractors? Companies that subcontract installation are not directly accountable for the install quality. Ask specifically whether the installers are W-2 employees of the company.
4. What does the warranty cover, and who services it? A warranty is only as useful as the company standing behind it and the clarity of what’s included. Ask for specifics: Does it cover adjustment? Hardware? Finish?
5. Can I see a sample in my own home, in natural daylight? Photos and showroom lighting mask finish quality and material texture. California’s light reveals everything. Any company that won’t bring samples to your home is a company that doesn’t want you comparing in real conditions.
If those answers are clear and specific, you’re dealing with a professional. If they’re evasive or dressed up in language that avoids the direct question, that tells you something important before you’ve committed to anything.
California is one of the most demanding climates in the country for interior shutters. Coastal homes deal with salt air, marine-layer moisture cycling, and sustained UV exposure. Inland homes face dry heat, wide daily temperature swings, and intense directional sunlight. Hillside properties often have non-standard framing and windows that are not perfectly square.
A shutter built for moderate East Coast conditions will not perform the same way in Laguna Beach or Palm Springs. The finish has to be engineered for UV stability. The wood has to be kiln-dried to the correct moisture content for the specific regional climate. The hardware has to resist corrosion. And the installation has to account for the reality that California homes frequently have framing tolerances that do not match catalog assumptions.
This is where the manufacturer advantage is most measurable. A company that builds shutters in California, for California homes, engineers the finish, the material preparation, and the hardware selection for conditions they deal with every day. A company sourcing from an offshore factory is receiving a product built to a generic specification that may or may not account for what your specific environment demands. The shutter style guide covers the right louver size, configuration, and color for every architectural style common in California.
We are a manufacturer. We build custom plantation shutters and custom closet doors from whole basswood in Colton, California. We have been doing this since 1981. Our own employees install every project. Our limited lifetime warranty is backed by the same company that built and installed the product.
We are not the only good shutter company in California. But we are one of the few that manufactures its own product from whole basswood, installs with its own team, and has been doing both for more than four decades from the same facility. That combination is genuinely rare.
Most projects complete within 4 to 6 weeks from design approval to installation. We also offer 12-month same-as-cash financing on qualifying projects.
If you want to see the material in your own light, compare finish options against your actual trim, and get a quote based on a professional measure of your real openings, schedule a free in-home consultation. We bring everything to you.
The best shutter company is not the one with the most locations or the biggest advertising budget. It is the one that built the product in your home, employed the team that installed it, and will be here to service it ten years from now. Everything else is a version of hoping someone else’s quality is good enough.
— Dean Frost, Founder & CEO, Elizabeth Shutters
Call 1-800-748-8377 or schedule at elizabethshutters.com/contact