Last November, I spent a Saturday on my living room floor with forty-two screws, four wooden dowels, and a single Allen key. The wordless manual sat by the radiator like a tiny manifesto. Three hours later, I had a bookshelf. Not perfect, but mine in a way no delivered piece could ever be.

Design That Asks Something of You

Flat-pack furniture is often dismissed as temporary. That misses the point. When you feel the click of a cam lock joining two panels, you develop a relationship with the object. You know how it works, and you can rebuild it in a new apartment, a new city, a new chapter.

A bookshelf you built yourself holds more than books. It holds the quiet pride of making something with your own hands.

That is democratic design: useful, affordable, and ready to carry home.