A small selection of dispatches and observations on the matter at hand.
You're probably surrounded by half-filled shopping bags, random tape rolls, and the sinking feeling that you own far more mugs, chargers, and mystery cords than any one household should. One closet looks manageable, then you open a hallway …
Shared household supplies tracking sounds like a tiny domestic problem until someone discovers the last roll of toilet paper is gone, the dish soap bottle is mostly water, or the good trash bags vanished three days before pickup. In a share…
You open the door, step into the new place, and the first emotion is relief. Then you turn around and see it. Boxes in the hallway, boxes in the bedroom, boxes blocking the bathroom cabinet, and one mystery carton labeled only “misc.” That'…
If you are searching for the best free home inventory tools, you have probably already noticed the catch. A lot of inventory apps look free until you try to add enough items, upload enough photos, export a report, invite another person, or …
Shared apartment duplicate purchases usually start as a harmless surprise. Someone moves in with a coffee maker, someone else orders one during a sale, and a third roommate brings the machine their parents were about to donate. A month late…
A useful annual home inventory checklist is not a once-and-done document. It is a yearly reset for the stuff you already own, the receipts you meant to save, the items you donated, the warranties that quietly expired, and the values that ch…
Inventory app vs photo documentation sounds like a small choice until you need to find a receipt, prove what you owned, split household responsibility, or remember which box holds the router cable. Taking photos of everything feels fast bec…
A shared pantry roommates system sounds like the kind of thing a tidy person invents after buying one too many label makers. In reality, it is a practical fix for one of the most common shared-kitchen problems: nobody knows what is communal…
A shared inventory app gives roommates, families, and shared households one practical place to answer a surprisingly emotional question: what do we own together? Not in a dramatic estate-law way, just in the everyday way that decides who bo…
You probably already own a first aid kit. The problem is that owning one and being able to rely on it are not the same thing. A lot of people find that out during a very ordinary moment, a sliced finger while cooking, a scraped knee after s…
Vorby is a careful record of what you own. The journal is the slow-print companion — the catalog itself is faster.