Each December, Dick Babcock's family would cut down their own Christmas tree, haul it home, wrestle it into a stand -- A little that way. No, too much! Back a little. -- then try to water it without spilling. In short, a lovely tradition nonetheless tinged with tension.
Babcock was an architect who built furniture in his spare time, so in 1982, his wife suggested that he design and construct a tree of wood. "And make it look Scandinavian."
He did, crafting a tree of wooden slats that required neither ax, nor water, nor the vacuuming of fallen needles. And, in a moment of brilliance, Babcock conceived of suspending it from the ceiling like a plumb line, forever unerringly straight.
Years passed.
Daughter Pat grew up and married Arne Sorenson. When they built a new home in 1992, it left them with a pile of scrap cedar. "Why don't I make you your own tree?" her dad offered, and he did.
Years passed.
No one remembers exactly what prompted the epiphany that Dad's trees were unique, but someone proposed that they pursue a patent.
"Oh, my dad labored over that process," Pat Sorenson said. Appearing to be a simple assemblage of slats, closer inspection reveals that each rising tier is subtly thinner than its neighbor, and that the edge of each slat angles diagonally. Babcock measured and re-measured every angle.