Everything here is built on shared values and mutual respect. We take our time, choose carefully and accept that saying no shapes the House as much as saying yes.

We are open to collaboration, contribution and conversation, but only when it feels grounded and considered. We say yes to work shaped by real relationships, to stories we are already part of, and to small gatherings where atmosphere matters more than numbers.

This is also where we draw boundaries. We are not interested in filling space, chasing volume or borrowing culture at the surface. We prioritise quality, curiosity and authorship, even when that means moving more slowly.

If something here feels familiar, you already know how to begin.


Contribute a story

Some stories can only be told by people who are already there.

If you are building, driving, fixing or organising, and you have a moment worth sharing, this is where it can live. We are interested in scenes, not spotlights, and in time spent rather than polished outcomes.

Stories come from proximity. If you are close enough to notice the details, you are close enough to contribute.

Make something together

Some work begins with trust, not a brief.

We collaborate with people whose taste we recognise and whose purpose we respect. That might lead to design, an event, a publication or something harder to define at the start.

Authorship matters. The best outcomes feel shared, and they carry the marks of everyone involved.

Gather in real life

The House exists beyond the page.

It shows up in real places – at events, on roads, in workshops and around tables. Sometimes that means turning up. Sometimes it means bringing people together. These moments are small by design and shaped by atmosphere rather than numbers.
If you value presence over performance, you will understand how these gatherings work.

Support the House

Some people join by staying close.

That might mean reading, returning, wearing something that carries a shared reference, or simply recognising what is being built here and choosing to support it.

Participation does not need to be loud to matter.