Threadcraft builds home technology that earns its place in the room — by being worth looking at, and by working without the cloud.

We started with a simple question: what if a device was as considered as the furniture it sits next to?

The home technology market is full of plastic boxes that demand your data, require your phone, and stop working when a company shuts down a server. We build the opposite: real materials, local networks, no strings.

What we make

Our first product is Linden — an air purifier and environmental monitor in a matte aluminum and walnut tower. Eight sensors, a HEPA filter, an always-on e-ink display, and no cloud dependency.

You plug it in, it connects to your WiFi, and it starts working. No account, no app, no data uploaded anywhere.

How we build

We design, assemble, and test everything ourselves. Machined aluminum enclosure, hand-finished walnut, custom Linux software built specifically for this hardware.

We chose components from manufacturers with track records: Sensirion sensors, Raspberry Pi compute modules, MQTT for home automation integration. Nothing proprietary.

When something can be replaced or upgraded, we design for that. Magnetic filter panel. Local software updates. Documented API.

What we believe

Local first

No cloud accounts, no telemetry, no subscriptions. If Threadcraft disappeared tomorrow, your Linden would keep running.

Materials matter

Aluminum and wood age well. Plastic doesn't. We use materials that look better over time — because a device in your living room should feel like it belongs there.

Honest engineering

If we can't explain why a feature matters in plain language, we don't ship it. Every sensor in Linden exists because the reading is useful, not to pad a spec sheet.

I want to build something that works in ten years, not something that needs a subscription in two.
Joey Rasmussen, Founder

Our first product is in active development.

See the Linden