I'm Przemek.
I spend my days in a digital world — wiring AV systems together, coaxing technology into doing what it's supposed to, living somewhere between a terminal window and a wiring diagram. It's good work. Precise, problem-solving, satisfying in its own way.
But it doesn't feed something in me. AI is coming for this kind of work. Not tomorrow, but eventually. And that quiet certainty made me stop and ask: what do I actually want to make?
The years that stripped things back.
2024 and 2025 knocked me around. Health, money, everything at once. The kind of years that strip away the comfortable stories you tell yourself and leave you with the real ones.
I kept coming back to a time before all that — a catering company I ran before COVID. Nothing conventional about it. Unusual flavor combinations, obsessive attention to presentation, every table setting built around the people sitting at it. I loved it. I was good at it. And COVID ended it in a matter of weeks. Fast decisions, real losses.
A few years later, working in automation, I used AI to get my time back. Down to a few days a week. Enough space to finally ask what I'd do with the rest of it.
Train journeys.
The answer came on trains. Long routes, nothing to do but look out the window and let the mind wander.
Woodworking from my teens. The creativity I found in catering. The precision that AV work drilled into me. What if those things belonged together?
Objects that are genuinely beautiful and genuinely useful — not decorations pretending to have a function, not tools pretending to have taste. Things that earn a place in your daily life and hold it.
Made by choice, not necessity.
I'm not doing this because I have to. I have a good job. I'm doing this because it's the only kind of making that feels complete to me — where craft, design, and purpose land in the same place at the same time.
No shortcuts. No scaled-down quality to hit a price point. Just the question I ask every time: is this the best version of what this could be?
If that matters to you too — welcome.