What the workshop actually does
One order. One name. One piece. Made in order.
Our workshop in Warsaw processes orders one at a time. When an order arrives with a child’s name on it, that name determines everything that follows — the piece that gets built, the finish applied, the nameplate carved. There is no warehouse of pre-built garages waiting to be labelled. There is a workshop that makes the piece when the order arrives.
This is the structural difference between commissioned and mass-market, and it has practical consequences. A commissioned piece takes three to seven days to build. It cannot be delivered the next day because it does not exist until the order does. What it gives in exchange is a piece that was made for a specific child, sized to their collection, finished in the colour their parent chose, named before it shipped. No mass-market product at any price point can replicate this — not because of cost, but because of structure.
The order is the beginning, not the retrieval of something that already existed.




