About Loomline


Why This Exists

Loomline started with frustration.

Modern planning tools are powerful. They are also heavy.
Dashboards. Workflows. Config panels. Notifications.

Somewhere along the way, thinking became secondary to managing the system.

Loomline was built as a reaction to that.

Not to compete with enterprise software.
Not to replace every tool.
But to create a quiet place where writing is the system.


The Idea

Most project tools begin with structure and ask you to fill it in.

Loomline begins with a blank Markdown document.

You write.

Headings become structure.
Checkboxes become threads.
Focus and Backlog surface from what you've already written.

There is one source of truth: the document.

Everything else is a lens.


The Philosophy

Constraint is not a limitation — it is a decision.

Loomline does not have:

  • Dashboards
  • Sprints
  • Assignments
  • Workflow builders
  • Endless configuration

It has:

  • Markdown
  • Threads
  • Focus
  • Backlog
  • Structure

That's enough.


Who It's For

Loomline is for people who think in paragraphs before they think in checklists.

For builders who want clarity without ceremony.

For solo operators who don't need a team velocity engine — just a clean place to plan.

If you believe that a project should read like a document, not a spreadsheet, you're in the right place.


Local by Default

The Mac app runs locally.
No account required.
Your files are yours.

Sync and AI features are optional layers — not mandatory ones.

Privacy and ownership are not features. They are the baseline.


The Long View

Loomline is being built carefully.

Mac first.
Web next.
AI assist.
Sync.
iPad.

Each addition must strengthen clarity — not introduce noise.

If it doesn't make thinking easier, it doesn't ship.


Built by TWTech

Loomline is developed by TWTech — an independent software studio focused on tools that reduce friction and increase clarity.

No venture funding.
No growth-at-all-costs roadmap.
Just steady, thoughtful iteration.


A Final Thought

Good tools feel quiet.

They don't ask for attention.
They don't gamify your focus.
They don't try to become your entire workflow.

They hold your work in place and let you think.

That's Loomline.