How We Think About Giving Gifts
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How We Think About Giving Gifts
Giving a gift is harder than it seems.
Not because of what to choose, but because of how it will feel when it’s received.
If it feels too much, it can be overwhelming. If it feels too small, it may not say enough.
That’s why giving a gift often feels more tense in the moment of giving than in the moment of choosing.
That’s where we begin.
Many gifts look beautiful, but slowly drift away from everyday life.
They sit on a shelf, or are used once and quietly forgotten.
We believe a gift should naturally fit into someone’s day, not interrupt it.

We choose things that are easy to use, comfortable to reach for, and quietly lasting.
Then we add a message.
Not a perfect sentence, but a real one.
A short line that turns an object into something that feels given, not just received.
From choosing each item to adding a message and preparing the final package,
we see gifting as one continuous process.
A gift is not a combination. It’s a completion.
A good gift doesn’t need to say everything.
It only needs to say, “I thought of you.”
That’s how we think about giving gifts.
Calmly, and with intention.
