Two products. One point of view - make things that are worth making.

the NODNOT® started on a long road trip across America. Every time I turned around to check on the kids, they were folded over on themselves, fast asleep. It looked deeply uncomfortable — and probably wasn't doing their necks any favours either. Like most people, we'd tried the horseshoe pillow, the inflatable neck ring, the rolled-up sweater — and like most people, arrived worse off. So I designed something better.

the NODNOT® is a travel pillow built for real sleep in an upright position, in a car, on a plane, or on the sofa when the film gets boring. It supports not just your head and neck but your whole upper body, which stops the slow-motion forward collapse that wakes you up the moment you drift off. Comfortable enough to actually fall asleep on. Sturdy enough to keep you there.

And then there's OOKUP.

I came across a documentary about fast fashion. The sheer volume of perfectly wearable clothing, much of it brand new, heading straight to landfill. I couldn't stop thinking about it. So I started doing something about it.

OOKUP is my ongoing series of cushion covers, each made from rescued or surplus clothing and fabric. Most designs yield a single cover - though where the fabric allows, I make two. When the fabric runs out, the design retires. No reprints, no restocks.

Every piece is thoroughly cleaned and finished before it reaches you. What you get is the character of the fabric, not its history.

Why both?

A travel pillow and a cushion cover series might seem like an unlikely combination. But they come from the same place - a belief that the things you live with every day should be worth living with. Considered, well made, and not wasteful if it can be helped.

That's the whole point, really.