Sawdust on the desk.
Solder on the bench.
I've always loved building things out of wood. The smell of fresh-cut birch, the way a sharp blade glides through a clean grain — that hooked me young.
I'm also a music lover. For years I built loudspeakers — measuring drivers, tuning ports, sanding cabinets at midnight until the curve of the corner felt right under my hand.
And since I was thirteen, I've been the family's PC guy. Every birthday build, every late-night re-cable, every "can you make my computer faster?" call — that was me. Friends, cousins, the neighbour two doors down.
For years I had this one specific dream: a wooden PC case. Minimal. Light. Small enough to carry. Quiet enough to live next to a couch instead of under a desk. Something you'd pair with a portable screen and a battery and just take somewhere.
After many years of sketches, scrap piles and "almost there" prototypes — I finally did it.
Timbrcase is what happens when wood and silicon stop pretending they don't belong together.