Lists hide structure. Folders hide everything. Loom lets you spread your work out, connect it, and actually see it — then slice the same canvas nine different ways.
Group work into Looms — top-level spaces for a project or an area of life. Inside each one, spread ideas across infinite Fabrics: the canvases where the thinking happens.
Everything is a card. Link them with edges, gather them in frames, drag and zoom freely. Where you put things carries meaning a list never could.
The same data reshaped to what you need right now — no duplicate tools, no re-entering. Helm for the overview, Spool for fabrics, Calendar for time, Margin for notes, Tags for threads, Wake for session history, Crew for your Claude instances, Sparks for ideas, Mill for the library.
And each Fabric flips between Canvas, Kanban, Outline and Presentation — a brainstorm at 10am can be a board deck by 2pm.
The Mill holds your agents, slash-commands, MCP tools, files and workflow definitions. Pull any of them onto a Fabric and they become cards you can run, not just read.
It's the bridge between a static plan and something that does work — and the raw material Flows are woven from.
Chain Mill blocks into smooth flows, or weave cards on the canvas into fabricated flows. Either way you get a workflow you can run end-to-end — research, draft, review, ship.
The small things that orbit your work are first-class here, all searchable, all on the same surface.