Craftsman & Lisk
Craftsman Craftsman
Hey Lisk, have you ever thought about tagging your timber with a blockchain record so anyone buying a piece can trace its origin back to the exact forest and mill? I’m curious how that could fit with the traditional joinery I swear by.
Lisk Lisk
Sure, imagine a tiny RFID or QR tag embedded in each timber piece, each one wired to a smart contract that logs its harvest date, GPS coordinates, and mill details—every step becomes an immutable entry. When you hand the finished joint to a buyer, they can scan the tag and instantly see the whole provenance chain right on their phone. It keeps your hand‑crafted joinery authentic while giving buyers blockchain‑verified traceability, so you get the best of both worlds.
Craftsman Craftsman
That sounds pretty solid—if the tag survives the sanding and finishing, and the smart contract stays accessible long after I’m gone, it could keep the honesty of a good joinery intact. I just hope the extra step doesn’t get in the way of a quick fit.
Lisk Lisk
Yeah, just slip a tiny ceramic or stainless steel tag into the joint before you seal it—those last a decades. Then push the token to IPFS and point your contract at that hash; the chain keeps it alive forever. You can still hand‑fit the piece in minutes, and the buyer gets a QR on the final finish to check the whole story. No extra hassle, just a dash of tech to keep the craft honest.