Our story...
WHY I STARTED?
When we moved into our new home, I started noticing small things that could be better. Not in a dramatic way — just the quiet frustration of not finding something simple that actually worked and looked good at the same time. So I made it myself. That’s really where Thuisely started.
That’s when I started experimenting with 3D printing — not to start a business, but just to make a few things for our own home that I couldn’t find anywhere else.
One of the first ideas came from our climbing plants. They make a home feel alive, but I could never find clips that were both practical and decent-looking. So I designed my own, printed a few, tested them on our wall — and they worked. That small experiment quietly became the first Thuisely product.
So I designed my own.
That small experiment became my first product 🌱, and slowly turned into something more meaningful — a way to design small, practical home solutions one idea at a time.
I created my first plant clip 🌿, tested it at home, adjusted it again and again, and slowly it became something that actually worked — and looked the way I wanted it to.
With my background in UI/UX design 🎨 I was already used to thinking about problems, structure, and simplicity. So I started treating this like a real design process — testing materials, improving details, and focusing on how something feels in everyday use.





How i make these products
The goal is not to overcomplicate things, but to design products that feel simple, useful, and naturally fit into everyday life 🌿.
This is just the beginning, and I’m building it step by step 🧩.
- Notice 👀→ “what if this could be better?”
- Sketch → rough ideas on paper, no rules
- 3D Print → bring it to life in real form
- Play→ try them in real homes and real life
- improve → tweak until it feels right
- ship it 🚀→ Keep only what works naturally
Why i keep building
This process never feels finished. There’s always a small problem to notice, a simple idea to try, and a way to make everyday life easier.
I don’t see this as building a big brand. It’s a slow, honest process of improving small things in real homes — one idea at a time.
Because every home has something that could work better.