Walk into a military unit building almost anywhere in the country, and there’s a good chance something on the wall came out of a small shop in Bandera. A badge, a seal, an insignia cut from cold-rolled steel, polished by hand and made to last. That’s Military Metal Art, and the team behind it will tell you the work has never really been about the metal.
It’s always been about the people.
Co-founders Jason DeBlasio and Aaron Bialaszewski have been at this for nine years, growing from a two-man operation in a rented Boerne shop into a full production facility with nearly 20 employees and around 2,000 pieces shipped every year. Their customer base is national, their reputation is strong, and their lead times were once as long as eight months but are now down to about 30 days. By any measure, the business is thriving.
But ask DeBlasio where it started and he’ll take you back to a smoothie shop.
A co-worker at Lackland Air Force Base had noticed a striking metal sign there and wanted to track down the artist behind it, hoping to commission a set of wings as a going-away gift for someone in the office. That artist was Bialaszewski. And when DeBlasio, a retired Air Force flight engineer with 13 deployments behind him, held the finished piece for the first time, something shifted.

“I had worn those wings for years, but I had never felt them come alive the way I did in that moment,” he said. The two men became partners not long after, and what started as a single gift quietly became something much larger.
Part of what sets their work apart is the material itself. While aluminum would be cheaper and easier to work with, every piece Military Metal Art produces is made from cold-rolled steel because it holds color more deeply and carries a polish that aluminum simply can’t match. It’s a small detail that speaks to a larger philosophy: When the work is meant to honor someone’s service, you don’t cut corners.

For Bialaszewski, the craft itself was more than a decade in the making. It was developed steadily on the side while he worked as a personal trainer, until the business grew large enough to make it his full-time vocation.
For DeBlasio, the transition was less gradual. One day he was a flight engineer; the next, he was figuring out payroll, corporate bylaws and shipping logistics from scratch. His military background, the discipline, the communication skills, the problem-solving instincts honed running Hickam Air Force Base’s innovation hub turned out to be more useful than any business course.

Nine years in, the piece that stays with DeBlasio most is the ASU Honor Badge, made for Arizona State’s Veterans Center at Sun Devil Stadium in memory of Pat Tillman. “He represents the very best of what service can mean,” DeBlasio said. It’s a quiet statement, but it carries the weight of everything the company stands for.
These aren’t decorations. They’re declarations of service, of sacrifice, of belonging to something worth remembering. And for the people who receive them, that tends to mean more than words ever could.


