A cabinet of curiosities
for what you own.

Photograph what's around you. The AI catalogs it in seconds — descriptions, values, categories. Ask your collection questions. Share lists with people you trust. And when someone describes what they need, you're matched. No listing step. No browse feed.

A warm wooden cabinet on a cream wall, holding a Polaroid camera, leather-bound book, dried lavender in a ceramic vase, folded sweater, canvas sneakers, brass desk lamp, framed photo, and small houseplant — softly lit from the upper left.
90 seconds. The morph.

The room you're in

$723

in unused items sits in the average household. 65% of people say selling is too hard.

USPS · Mercari joint study, 2023

Five things, one cabinet.

Three of them happen alone, in your pocket. Two of them happen when you let someone in.

For you, first

Scan

Open the app. Capture a burst of photos. The AI separates the items, names them, dates them, values them. An evening with a spreadsheet becomes a single Scan.

Refresh

The system speaks in lavender when it has something to suggest. looks like one you already have You judge; the AI shows its work.

Ask

Type a question. Where's the spare HDMI? Do I already have a stand mixer? Your collection answers in lavender, pointing at the items it's referring to. 3 items referenced

For the people you let in

Share

Make a list out of your catalog — a moving-box inventory, a wishlist, what's in the attic. Hand it to a trusted circle. Households see everything by default; everyone else sees only what you've shared, on purpose.

Matched — not listed.

Someone describes what they're looking for — a replacement Polaroid battery, a lamp for a nightstand, a part for a 1998 push mower. The system reads the intent and matches it to items already in other people's cabinets. No browse feed. No listing form.

Why this works now

The economics caught up to the metaphor.

$0.00015/ item ~80items in onboarding ~$0.024to catalog a household

Per-item cataloging cost dropped to fractions of a cent in 2026 — Gemini Flash for Tier 1 cataloging, Pro for Tier 2 appraisal, on-device for everything that should stay on device. The unit economics that made this impossible in 2022 work now.

ADR-046 · two-tier pipeline  ·  ADR-074 · cloud-default with on-device fallback

The ask

Two paths. Same product. Different speed.

Path A · behavioral validation

$500K–$1M seed

12 months. Small engineering team, organic growth. The goal is to answer one question: do people catalog, and do they accept offers on items they cataloged for personal use?

Path B · the Uber playbook

$5–10M uplift

Subsidized cataloging across 10+ market cohorts. Android. A real growth team. The bigger swing. Reserved for the investor who wants to fund the marketplace, not the validation.

See the deck, the long-form demos, and the unit economics →

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