17 American Made Home Goods & Furniture Stores We Love
When you buy American made home goods from a small business, you know exactly where your money is going: to the craftspeople who made the product, in the town where they live and work. That kind of transparency is hard to find at big box retailers. We put together a list of our favorite small businesses that sell home goods made entirely in the USA, from bedding and kitchenware to pottery, candles, and lighting. We vetted every store to confirm their products are domestically manufactured, and we checked their online reviews for consistent customer satisfaction.
Our Pick for American Made Furniture
Countryside Amish Furniture

Click around our website to find American made dining tables, bedroom sets, living room collections, and outdoor furniture, all hand-crafted by Amish woodworkers using carefully selected North American hardwoods. Every piece is built to order, which means you choose the wood species, stain, and special features that make it uniquely yours.
Why shop for American made furniture online? You’ll have access to thousands of designs rather than whatever happens to be on the showroom floor. Our Illinois-based team is available to walk you through customization options, and our delivery crew will bring the finished pieces directly to your home and set them up exactly where you want them.
Interested in more Amish-made products? Check out our guide to Amish stores that ship across the USA. To learn more about Amish furniture, specifically, read about what goes into the cost of handmade pieces.
American Made Bedding and Linens

Authenticity50
Founded in 2015 by a husband-and-wife team who couldn’t find quality American made bedding for their own home, Authenticity50 is one of the few brands that can account for every stage of their domestic textiles. Every product (cotton sheets, blankets, pillows, duvets, and towels) is 100% Seed-to-Stitch® made in the USA. The cotton is grown in California, spun into yarn in Georgia, woven in the Carolinas, and finished in New Jersey. With over 4,000 five-star reviews, this is one of the most trusted names in American made home goods.
Red Land Cotton
The bedrock of Red Land Cotton three-generation family farm in Moulton, Alabama that grows its own cotton and turns it into heirloom-quality bedding and bath linens. Mark Yeager and his daughter Anna reverse-engineered a set of sheets from the 1920s to recapture the feel and durability of linens that were made to last a lifetime. The cotton is rain-fed, never irrigated, and ginned on-site. Sheets are spun in Virginia, woven in South Carolina, and cut and sewn just ten miles from the farm. Towels are manufactured in Griffin, Georgia. The whole operation runs within a tight radius of the farm, and you can feel that in the finished product.
Mosaic Weighted Blankets
Every Mosaic weighted blanket is cut, assembled, and sewn by skilled seamstresses at their Austin, Texas facility. Since 2013, founder Laura LeMond has built this American home goods company around her own experience with sensory challenges, designing blankets that use deep pressure stimulation to promote calm and better sleep. They offer options for adults, teens, kids, and seniors in cotton, Minky, and Coolmax fabrics, plus accessories like lap pads and neck wraps.
A note for transparency: while all assembly happens in Texas, some fabrics are sourced internationally due to demand.
American Blanket Company
Founded by Rick Lotuff, whose father ran a garment factory in Massachusetts, American Blanket Company picked up where he left off. Their fleece blankets, cotton blankets, throws, sheets, and pillowcases are all cut and sewn in Fall River, Massachusetts. Their cotton products use U.S.-grown cotton, and the fleece (their signature Luster Loft) is globally sourced but domestically manufactured.
Every blanket ships gift-wrapped in a white box with a silver ribbon for a nice, extra touch.
American Made Kitchenware

USA Pan
The Bundy family has been manufacturing bakeware in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania since 1959, first for commercial bakeries and since 2009 for home cooks as well. Their sheet pans, loaf pans, muffin tins, and cake pans are made from aluminized steel with a proprietary nonstick Americoat® silicone coating. The signature corrugated surface improves air circulation and resists warping.
For full transparency: USA Pan states their products are “made in the USA from globally sourced materials,” meaning raw steel may originate internationally, but all manufacturing and assembly happens in Pittsburgh.
Liberty Tabletop
Liberty Tabletop is the only manufacturer of stainless steel flatware still operating in the United States. The only one. Based in Sherrill, New York, this family-owned company uses domestically sourced 18-10 stainless steel to produce forks, knives, spoons, and serving pieces in a variety of elegant patterns. The factory has been producing flatware for over a century, and co-owners Matt Roberts and Greg Owens bought the equipment from Oneida Limited in 2005 to keep American flatware manufacturing alive. The company even supplies flatware to U.S. military bases worldwide.
Lamson
Established in 1837, Lamson is the oldest cutlery manufacturer in the United States. Their blades are laser-cut in Shelburne Falls, Massachusetts and finished in Westfield, Massachusetts, with each knife hand-polished, ground, and sharpened by American craftsmen.
The lineup includes chef’s knives, paring knives, bread knives, turners, BBQ tools, and more. Every Lamson product comes with a lifetime guarantee and their Sharp for Life™ program provides complimentary professional sharpening forever.
Rada Cutlery
Rada has been handcrafting kitchen knives and utensils in Waverly, Iowa since 1948. What makes them unusual, even among American manufacturers, is that they source everything from U.S. suppliers: the aluminum, the steel, the handles, the packaging. Almost nobody does that.
The company started when a small family business repurposed post-war aluminum and steel into kitchen knives, and the original designs (Regular Paring, Steak/Utility, and Slicer) are still in production today. Over 170 million knives sold, a lifetime guarantee on every product, and a fundraising program that over 12,000 schools, churches, and community groups use each year.
American Made Pottery and Ceramics

HF Coors
This veteran-owned, family-run pottery has been making ceramic dinnerware in the USA since 1925. Today, every plate, mug, bowl, and platter is manufactured under one roof at their Tucson, Arizona factory. They mix their own clay, make their own molds, formulate their own glazes, and hand-paint their designs on-site. Everything is lead-free, cadmium-free, and restaurant-grade durable.
Their Southwestern-inspired patterns have a cult following, and you’ll find their pieces in restaurants and homes across the country. They look great on a solid wood Amish dining table.
Emerson Creek Pottery
Founded in 1977 in Bedford, Virginia, Emerson Creek Pottery is a family-owned studio in the Blue Ridge Mountains. Every step of their process, from mixing custom clay formulas to forming, glazing, hand-painting, firing, packing, and shipping, is completed by artisans in their Virginia studio. Each piece goes through at least eight pairs of hands before reaching yours. Their collection includes bakeware, dinnerware, mugs, serving pieces, pet bowls, and home goods, all non-toxic, lead-safe, and cadmium-safe. Designs lean botanical—classic cobalt, watercolor florals, that sort of thing. Their outlet store sits in an 1825 log cabin on the property, which is worth the trip on its own.
American Made Candles and Home Fragrance

P.F. Candle Co.
Owned and operated by wife-and-husband team Kristen Pumphrey and Thomas Neuberger, P.F. Candle Co. has grown from a Los Angeles kitchen project into one of the most recognized independent candle brands in the country. Their entire collection (soy candles, reed diffusers, incense, room sprays, and car fresheners) is designed, produced, tested, packed, and shipped by their LA team. No outsourcing, no exceptions. You’ve probably seen their amber glass jars around—they’re everywhere.
Brooklyn Candle Studio
Founded in 2013 by former art director Tamara Mayne, Brooklyn Candle Studio produces minimalist botanical soy candles, room sprays, and reed diffusers from a 20,000-square-foot workshop in Sunset Park, Brooklyn. Every product is hand-poured and labeled by their in-house team. They’ve been featured in Allure, Apartment Therapy, and Vogue, which tells you something about the packaging. All candles are 100% vegan, phthalate-free, petroleum-free, and made 100% in the USA.
Keystone Candle
This four-generation, family-owned candle company has been handmaking candles in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania since 1977. What started as a school fundraiser by elementary school teachers Jeff and Cathy Brown turned into a full-scale operation with a retail outlet store near Hershey, PA.
They manufacture every type of candle you can imagine: scented and unscented jar candles, pillars, tapers, votives, tea lights, floating candles, and wax melts. If it has a Keystone Candle label, it was made in the USA. The business is now run by the Brown family’s daughters and granddaughters.
Warm Glow Candle Company
Hand-dipped in Indiana, Warm Glow is committed to quality “the old-fashioned-made-in-the-USA-way.” Their lineup includes hand-dipped candles, jar candles, wax melts, and fragrance oils. Their website looks like it hasn’t been updated since 2010, but the reviews are overwhelmingly positive—especially from customers who’ve visited their Indiana location in person.
American Made Lighting
The Lamp Goods
Family-owned since 2009, The Lamp Goods creates handmade light fixtures including mason jar lighting, farmhouse pendants, wall sconces, vanity lights, and ceiling fan light kits. Every fixture is an original design, made in the USA with UL-rated electrical components and assembled by skilled hands. Their farmhouse and rustic aesthetic pairs naturally with Amish furniture. Picture a mason jar chandelier hanging over an Amish trestle table. The company donates a portion of every sale to children’s charities.
Why American Made Home Goods Matter
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You can actually verify the claims. A 2016 GSA investigation found 11 companies falsely claiming their flatware was made in the USA. Liberty Tabletop was the only one that passed. When the home goods manufacturer is domestic, the claim is verifiable. When it’s not, you’re trusting a label.
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Lifetime guarantees mean something when the factory is down the road. Lamson sharpens your knives for free, forever, at the same Massachusetts facility where they were made. Rada, USA Pan, and Emerson Creek Pottery all back their products for life. That’s only possible when you control the whole process.
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The “made in USA” label has legal teeth. The FTC requires that products marketed as American made use “all or virtually all” domestic materials and labor. That’s a higher bar than most consumers realize, and every store on this list meets it.
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The money stays close to home. Keystone Candle supports four generations of one Pennsylvania family. Emerson Creek Pottery puts each piece through eight pairs of Virginia hands. Red Land Cotton employs 36 people within ten miles of the farm where their cotton grows. These aren’t rounding errors in a corporate report. They’re entire local economies.
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You get to see how the sausage is made (literally and figuratively). The businesses on this list publish their Prop 65 test results, list every fragrance ingredient, and trace their cotton to specific farms. At Countryside Amish Furniture, we can tell you exactly which North American hardwood your piece is made from and that it's finished with catalyzed conversion varnish, the most durable furniture finish on the market while still remaining non-toxic. Comparatively, some other manufacturers cost-saving measures that jeopardize both the products and the users, such as using particleboard bonded with formaldehyde-emitting adhesives or untested finishes.
Bring Home American Made Tradition With Countryside Amish Furniture
Amish furniture isn’t the same thing as what you’ll find on the shelves of big box stores. It’s built from solid North American hardwood (like cherry, oak, walnut, or brown maple) using mortise-and-tenon joinery, the same technique that has held together structures for centuries.
Countryside Amish Furniture ships directly from the workshops to homes across the contiguous USA—and our delivery crew sets everything up for you.
Every piece is also made-to-order. You choose the wood species, the stain, and the dimensions. If you need a 96-inch table to seat twelve, or a desk built to fit an awkward office corner, the piece is built to your specifications.
If you want to see how it works, browse our catalog or give our Illinois team a call. They can walk you through wood options, stain colors, and custom sizing.


