Work we'll put our names to.
The products we've shipped and the ones we're building now — across family services, personal safety, ecommerce and fintech. Each one designed and engineered end-to-end by the people whose names sit at the top of this site.
When someone dies, a family is hit with a hundred decisions and no map — funeral directors to find, paperwork to chase, and wishes nobody wrote down. It lands in the worst possible week.
A mobile app that walks families through what to do after a loss, lets anyone record their own funeral wishlist in advance, and helps arrange the unveiling and memorial services that come after. A separate provider portal extends the same backend to the funeral businesses behind it.
Live on iOS and Android — a three-surface system spanning the family app, a provider portal, and the operations view behind both.
Everyone keeps their whole life on one device — and not a single phone number in their head. Lose the phone and you lose the way to reach anyone who matters.
A personal emergency-access service. Sync your key contacts, notes and documents once, then reach them from any borrowed browser with a username and PIN — nothing to install, offline-cached, encrypted end to end. The single point of failure in everyone's pocket, removed.
Live on web, iOS and Android.
Custom-printed packaging is hard to sell online. A flat mockup can't show the finished product, so customers hesitate, second-guess, or order the wrong thing.
An interactive 3D configurator embedded directly in their Shopify store. Customers spin the product, drop in their artwork and colourways, and preview a photoreal result in real time — then add the exact thing they configured to cart.
The studio's first build together as D&A.
South African payments are still clunky — fees, friction, and rails that were never built for the way people here actually move money.
A fintech product led by co-founder Arian, currently in development — rethinking everyday payments from the rails up, with the studio's engineering behind it.
Built by hand. Owned end to end.
Thirty minutes. One workflow on the table. An honest read on whether it's worth automating — and what the real engagement would look like if it is.