A small workshop for unfinished things

Turning unfinished problems into tools that work.

Life and work are full of problems we keep living with. Homework Salon collects them, finds useful connections, and turns them into things we can actually use.

The Keeper carrying a satchel filled with different unfinished problem fragments
01 A place for unfinished things

What “homework” means

Everyone has something unfinished.

Here, homework does not mean schoolwork. It means the recurring tasks, unresolved frictions, and everyday problems we have not yet found a good way to handle.

The Keeper preserving unfinished fragments in a cabinet so they can be revisited

01 · Preserve

We keep what is not ready to be solved.

A problem does not stop mattering because we cannot solve it today. We keep it visible so we can return to it with better questions and better tools.

02 · Welcome

We bring it into the workshop.

Homework Salon is not a showroom of perfect answers. It is a small workshop that welcomes unfinished things.

The Keeper opening a deep-green door into a warm workshop
Problem fragments and tools laid out for study on a round table

03 · Observe

We lay the pieces out.

We make the problem smaller, change its shape, and look for what keeps repeating before rushing toward a solution.

04 · Connect

We look for unexpected connections.

New possibilities appear when problems, experiences, and tools that seemed unrelated begin to connect.

The Keeper studying a large working path of experiments, failures, and corrections

The problems are not new. What is new is the tool we can bring to them: AI.

The Keeper making a small prototype from paper, clay, and brass parts

05 · Make

We make something small and use it.

AI, automation, and software are materials, not the point. We build the smallest useful form and learn from using it.

06 · Return

We return it as something useful.

Apps, automations, small tools, and systems give unfinished everyday problems a way to move again.

A small automated machine turning unfinished fragments into repeatable useful tools
First — It becomes a repeatable system
The Keeper returning a finished tool that still carries a trace of the original problem
Then — It returns as something useful to one person

The original problem is not erased. It returns as something we can use.

Stay in the loop

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