
Some of the best things we've featured in the house came from conversations with people we already knew. This is one of those.
Jackson and Carl, the two designers behind Link Kit, are regulars here. When they told us what they were building, we pulled up a seat and listened.

The link-in-bio has been broken for a long time. You spend serious time on your work, you build something worth seeing, and then you send people to a page that looks like an afterthought. A list of links dressed up as a presence. For photographers, designers and videographers who care about every detail of what they make, that disconnect has always felt like the wrong ending to a good story.
Link Kit was built by designers who felt the same way. The layouts are considered. The typographic choices are intentional. The whole thing is designed to give work the space it deserves rather than compress it into a template that could belong to anyone. It's the difference between sliding something across the counter with care and just leaving it on the side.

One of those decisions you feel even before you understand why.
What we've always believed in the house is that every touchpoint is a creative decision. The way you present yourself online is part of the work. The page someone lands on after seeing your best image, your strongest campaign, your most considered project, that page is still you. It should feel like it. Link Kit connects your portfolio, your social channels, your store, your work, all of it, without looking like a compromise. The kind of finish that makes the first impression match everything that came before it.

We don't feature things in the house we don't believe in. That's always been the standard. Link Kit cleared it without question.
Shot of the good stuff.
