Stool Studio

Contact

Contact Stool Studio

Use this page for editorial questions, correction requests, and general notes about the rolling stool guides.

Stool Studio is a static editorial mini-site, so there is no account dashboard, order portal, phone support line, or physical showroom attached to these pages. The simplest way to reach the editorial side is by email at editorial@stoolstudio.com. That address is intended for comments about the guides, not urgent safety issues, product warranty claims, or customer service for another company.

Helpful messages are usually specific. If a page has a broken link, unclear wording, a missing accessibility detail, or a section that could explain a topic better, include the page title and a short note about what you noticed. For example, comments about stool height, caster behavior, floor protection, or small-space layout can help us decide which sections need clearer examples.

Good reasons to contact us

What we cannot do

We cannot provide personal ergonomic, medical, legal, warranty, or installation advice. We also cannot verify whether a specific product is safe for a particular person, floor, workplace, or tool setup. For those decisions, readers should check manufacturer documentation and relevant professional guidance.

Editorial scope

Rolling stools, compact seating, shop layout, caster selection, height fit, trays, and floor-safety considerations.

Response style

If a message is useful for improving a page, we may use it as a prompt to clarify future guide content.

For navigation, start with the main Stool Studio guide, then move into the narrower notes such as small-space stool layout or storage tray uses. Those pages show the kind of practical editorial questions this site is designed to answer.

No fake office details: Stool Studio does not list a phone number or street address because this mini-site is a static editorial resource, not a staffed retail location.

Before sending a note

Please remember that this site is built for general editorial guidance. A useful message does not need to be formal, but it should give enough context to understand the issue. If a checklist feels too thin, mention which checklist. If a page needs another example, describe the kind of room or task that would make the section clearer. If an image does not match the topic well, mention the page where it appears.

We may not reply to every message, but clear feedback can still help improve future updates. The best feedback is practical, specific, and related to the reader experience rather than promotional outreach.

If the note is about a specific workspace, include whether it is a garage, craft room, small office, utility corner, or bench area. That context helps shape examples that feel useful rather than generic.