About
Meadow Arc is an independent product studio based in Sweden.
I started it to build software that feels calm, clear, and genuinely useful.
There is no shortage of apps, tools, and platforms in the world. What feels rarer is software that actually helps when energy is low, attention is stretched, or life already feels a little too full. That is the kind of work I want Meadow Arc to make.
The goal is not to build more for the sake of it. It is to build things that earn a place in everyday life.
Why this exists
Meadow Arc exists because I care about software from the user’s side of the screen, not just from the builder’s side.
I want to make products that reduce friction instead of adding more of it. That affects the interface, but also the pacing, the wording, the number of decisions a product asks someone to make, and the kinds of problems it tries to solve in the first place.
The underlying idea is simple: useful software should make a difficult moment a little easier, not slightly more crowded.
Approach
The work at Meadow Arc is shaped by a few steady principles:
- simplicity over feature volume
- clarity over cleverness
- steady support over pressure
- real usefulness over polished positioning
That usually leads to smaller, more deliberate products. Fewer claims. More attention to what a tool feels like when someone actually has to rely on it.
Current focus
The current focus is Caligo Relief, a product shaped by the experience of trying to make sense of symptoms that can change from day to day.
It is being built to help people notice patterns, return to small helpful activities, and get a clearer sense of progress over time without turning the whole process into another burden.
That work says a lot about what Meadow Arc is trying to be: practical, calm, and close to real life.
Over time
Meadow Arc is meant to grow slowly.
I am less interested in building a large collection of products quickly than in building a smaller body of work with a clear reason to exist. Different tools may emerge over time, but the direction should stay the same: thoughtful software that respects the reality of everyday use.
If you want to follow that work, you can read the ongoing Posts or browse the current Projects.
Contact
For questions, feedback or collaboration: