Not the brief.
No client, no constraints, just ideas that won't stop spinning until you build them. From vague ideas to vibe-coded prototypes, this is my 'What if' section turned into approximate code that actually work. Exploring and learning altogether.
Commeat — A personal cookbook, versioned like code
I wanted my recipes in one place — but not another Notion database. So I built Commeat: every recipe is a plain Markdown file synced to a GitHub repo I own. Each edit is a commit, each adaptation a fork — the same model developers use, applied to a family recipe. It also gave me a real reason to learn React properly: building the import flow, commit history, and GitHub sync from scratch instead of following a tutorial.
Visit CommeatTools: React/TypeScript, Tailwind CSS, GitHub API, Claude Code
Unblending Blender 3D
Blender's complexity is a feature, not a bug—it's what makes it so powerful. But that density shouldn't be the barrier to entry. As a regular user and open-source contributor, I set out to declutter this world-class tool: removing the noise, surfacing the essential, and building an interface that gets out of your way so you can focus on the 3D model, not the software itself.
The result strips away the noise and guides users toward what matters. See the before and after below.
More to come, what will it be?
A website that generates a fictional city based on your browser history? A browser extension that turns boring error messages into tiny illustrated quests? A collaborative music player where every listener can mutate the soundtrack in real time by adding strange rules instead of songs? ...
✴ Discombobulating... Concocting... Moseying... Whirring...