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30 Year Hero
30 Year Hero

CARVART | 30 YEARS

1996 TO 2026

Before CARVART had a name, it had a foundation.

The story begins with glass as a craft passed down through generations. For the Geyman family, working with glass was not an industry. It was learned by hand through discipline, repetition, and respect for the material. Knowledge was inherited, not branded.

In Eastern Europe, where the family’s trade took shape, glassmaking was physical and exacting. Edward Geyman’s grandfather worked as a glazier at a time when large panes of glass were carried through city streets strapped carefully to the back, balanced and protected by skill alone. It was labor that required strength, control, and an understanding of fragility. That was the world this knowledge came from.

Anatoly Geyman, a third-generation glass artisan, carried that discipline forward. Surfaces were cut, sandblasted, and etched by hand. Precision was earned. There were no shortcuts. The standards that would later define CARVART were already being formed through his work ethic, craftsmanship, and commitment to doing things properly.

Edward grew up immersed in that tradition. As a teenager in Ukraine, he learned to etch glass under his father’s guidance, mastering sandblasting and carving through direct experience. Errors were permanent. Process mattered as much as outcome.

When the family immigrated to the United States, that generational knowledge came with them. Glass was never treated as surface decoration. It was material with responsibility. It had to be shaped deliberately and understood completely.

While attending college in the United States, Edward began exploring how glass could evolve beyond traditional decorative applications. Early concepts, innovation brochures, and new ideas reflected an instinct to build forward before scale was yet possible. The name CARVART, combining “Carve” and “Art,” came from that period, reflecting a balance of craft and creativity.

That work led to additional commercial opportunities, including early projects with Warner Music and other specified environments. Glass was no longer only decorative. It became part of how space was organized, experienced, and defined.

Over the decades that followed, CARVART continued evolving from custom glass fabricator to full architectural partner. Engineering, design assist, prototyping, mockups, and systems thinking became core strengths. Clients returned not simply for products, but for solutions grounded in collaboration, technical fluency, and execution.

Growth followed without compromising the values that built the company. Expanded facilities, larger teams, broader capabilities, and increasingly complex projects allowed CARVART to scale while staying grounded in craftsmanship.

The material language evolved as well. What began in glass expanded into integrated solutions that now include metal, wood, hardware, and multi-material systems designed to work as one cohesive architectural expression.

Today, CARVART delivers turnkey architectural solutions across workplace, hospitality, residential, healthcare, and commercial environments. Office fronts, movable walls, doors, shower enclosures, bathroom systems, decorative materials, and custom integrated solutions define a company shaped by generations of knowledge and decades of progress.

Thirty years later, the principles remain the same. Respect the material. Solve the challenge. Build with intention.

What began with craft continues in 2026 as innovation, partnership, and architectural execution.

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