Hello, there are two things that really motivate me about cabin living: the cabin itself and the wood stove that goes inside it.
I live in France, and there are no manufacturers of mini wood-burning cookstoves here. So I had to learn how to weld and build many prototypes to design this stove.
The customization work and the installation of the side viewing window were carried out by a friend.
The main challenge was to reduce the size of the cookstove while maintaining its cooking capabilities. For the firebox, I drew inspiration from workshop sawdust stoves, with an air intake from the top. A primary air supply also comes through the ash drawer. The stove’s output is around 4 to 6 kW.
To achieve an efficient oven with flue gases passing only over the top, I installed a terracotta bread oven floor in the lower section. It stores heat after about 30 minutes, and the oven can reach temperatures of up to 300°C.
This is beautiful work. The tiny cabin, the wood cookstove, and the care in every detail create something really special. I honestly think the result is as inspiring as it is functional. Designing such a compact stove while keeping real cooking capacity is no small achievement. Respect — this is craftsmanship, intelligence, and soul in the same project. Thank You.
Hi Juan, The cabin is actually a wagon built by my friend, who customized the stove.
I’m including a link to a blog article that shows the full construction process : wagon building
Hi Michael, as for me, I’ve greatly shortened my story. It took no less than five years of work and more than 150 stoves to reach this result. I built my first stove for my converted shipping container; people saw it on my blog and asked if I could make one for them, and everything followed from there.
My first attempt here and the original tutorial : Mini stove DIY
Hi Cristobal, you're right, there is kind of Jean Pierre Jeunet aesthetics on this stove.
The last picture is from an another similar stove without customizing. For an efficient oven you need a thick terracotta, this one is 30x30x5cm and about 10kg. And The height of the oven should not be too great.
I made a short Youtube video of the last stove but it's only in french :
These are awesome! Do you have a way to commission these? Or buy blueprints to try to build our own? Im building a yurt and want something slightly more mobile then a RMH and these are a great idea while being beautiful and inspiring!
Hi Sam, I’m the creator of these wood stoves, so yes, it is possible to order them. However, I live in France, so it might be a bit complicated to ship the stove to you. My website :webpage
I have also designed a small rocket stove cooker with a power output of 4 kW.
I made a complete tutorial to build it yourself — it’s in French, but there are lots of photos. It’s also possible to retain some heat by placing bricks on the cooking surface once you’ve finished cooking : DIY mini rocket stove tutorial
I can also recommend this video tutorial, which is similar to the stoves I make :
These are great Rémy - thank you so much for sharing! I'm interested in those terracotta oven blocks, I'll have to find out more about those not sure how easy they would be to find in the UK. I could see one of these little stoves being a useful backup cooking device, even in a 'normal' house.
Note the flat iron behind the stove in the first post in the tiny cabin too....
The bricks and terracotta I use come from the Raujolles brickyard in Millau, in central France. It is pure clay certified for food contact. They also ship their products via carriers.
Raujolles bricks
Thank you very much!
I manufacture the stoves in small batches. For now, they mainly help fund my workshop so I can develop new inventions.
It’s a space I share with my brother, besides the stoves, we repair or modify just about anything that comes our way
Hi Larry, yes, I work with stick welding. It’s true that MIG welding is faster. I chose stick welding for its ruggedness and simplicity. Since we do repairs in the workshop, I sometimes have to weld different types of metals and a wide range of thicknesses.
Sometimes, when working on construction equipment, we have to weld outdoors. Stick welding is very practical in windy conditions because it provides good gas shielding for the weld, unlike MIG or TIG.
For the stoves, I use stick pulsed welding, it's very efficient and easiest than usual stick welding.
I think the chainsaw is an old Husqvarna or Shindaiwa. It’s a forested region, and I have quite a nice collection of them in for repair! Dolmar is pretty good too.
That's a great little stove! I'll show it to my brother (he built my current heating stove....).
Here is another tiny house cook stove solution - it was designed for a VERY small living space on a boat, and they say it does heat the space adequately, too. I'll post a link to the video (it's number 6 in a series), but all they did was take one of those round camping rocket stoves, put a heat-proof surface under it, and built a shallow metal box that fits over the top of the rocket stove (I think there's a collar on the bottom of the box). On the top of the shallow box there's a collar for the flue. So they are able to cook on top of the little rocket stove without getting smoke in the house. No oven, but one of the folding camping ovens should work on top of the cook surface.