
For the past two years, I’ve been building something quietly.
After more than a decade of community organising – from Pride in London to Bi Pride UK, from youth activism to strategic campaigning – I realised something I couldn’t ignore anymore: our communities are still being asked to shrink. To show up, but not take up space. To bring the folding chair, but not speak too loudly once we’re in the room.
The truth is, visibility isn’t liberation.
Survival isn’t enough.
And queer joy shouldn’t be radical.
So I decided to build something that responded to that.
Not a campaign.
Not a brand.
A home. A platform. A movement.









