Category Archives: Learnings

We all are creative. Even when we don’t feel like it. Even when the world tries to box creativity inside the borders of “art,” “design,” or “music.” If you are able to think, imagine, and create something – even just an idea – you are creative. I’ve always loved creating. Loved building things with my hands, sketching thoughts into shapes, turning the noise in my head into something you could see, touch, or read. And when that energy doesn’t find a way out, I start feeling anxious. Restless. As if my brain is trying to tell me: move it out, or it will drown you. Starting this blog was one of those moments. I didn’t have a big idea or a vision. I just had an urge. A small, foolish nudge to do something on April Fools’ Day. To begin – without knowing what beginning meant. But looking back now,…

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It all started on April Fools’ Day, which in hindsight feels oddly appropriate. I had no plan, no name, no niche, and definitely no long-term strategy. I wasn’t launching a brand or building an audience. I was just curious. I opened up a blank page and began writing, without knowing what would come out of it. The first post felt like tossing a paper plane into the wind just to see where it might land. That was the challenge: write something without needing to know where it was going. I set a small goal—ten posts in one month. Just to see if I could. And now here we are. Ten posts in. The original goal is complete. And while this blog might still not have a clear direction, I now have something I didn’t have before: a trail. A visible, tangible thread of thoughts that connects the last month in…

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In 2010, I was studying at Aalto University, working part-time as an assistant, and raising my first child. My life was full—sometimes overwhelmingly so. But when an opportunity came to join a product development project in collaboration with Nokia, I couldn’t resist. I’ve always been drawn to ideas, to solving small everyday problems, and to making things just to see where they might lead. At the time, I was full of curiosity and excitement. But let’s be honest—having a young family and work responsibilities came with its own set of doubts and limitations. I couldn’t burn the midnight oil endlessly like some of my friends. Time was tight. Priorities had to be juggled. Still, when you have the will, you find the energy. I made it work, though not without mistakes. Those years taught me a lot about balance—and how, in the long run it shaped to my core value:…

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Sometimes I really love how my brain works. Other times, I wish it came with an off switch. There are moments when I feel like my mind is a whiteboard in a storm—ideas flying onto it from every direction, half-formed, overlapping, impossible to erase. It’s exciting. It’s energizing. It’s also… a bit overwhelming. I get inspired easily. Then I start shaping the inspiration into something more tangible. Then I start thinking how to actually make it real. And before I know it, I’m halfway through concepting a physical prototype in my head—when all I really did was take a walk, or have a conversation, or leave my computer at work to “take a break.” Spoiler: I didn’t take a break. Not in my head. A Thought That Didn’t Leave Me Alone Lately, I’ve been reflecting more—not just on ideas, but on feelings. I had a moment this week where I…

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In last post, I went on a walk that sparked a whole chain of ideas.The sun was shining, the air was crisp, and I stumbled across a dome-shaped playground structure that got me thinking about my summerhouse project. I wrote about it. I let it sit. Then I did the only thing that felt natural: I opened my laptop and didn’t design the thing. No, really—I could’ve just opened CAD, spent 15 minutes sketching a dome concept, and called it a day. But where’s the fun in that? Instead, I got an idea:What if I built a dome generator?Like… an actual tool that could generate the structure for me and export the necessary data points. That way, I could play with forms, scale, and proportions on the fly. And maybe even learn something along the way. And of course—obviously—I figured I’d nail it on the first try. I mean, how…

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