We don’t struggle to make work. We struggle to make work together.

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@lylacapp
We don’t struggle to make work. We struggle to make work together.
Creative universities are incredibly powerful, even if you don’t utilise your course after you graduate, the connections you make and the people you meet stick with you throughout your life afterwards.
They’re powerful BECAUSE of these networks, connections and chance encounters, but there’s no translation of this physical environment in the digital world - for those graduating, and for those who don’t have access to university in the first place. So how can we immerse ourselves in environments that allow us the opportunity to have these encounters, chance meetings and high-value networks. You can go to events, bookshops and galleries and you can go out of your way to create them, or you can be part of a new creative community online that’s building a space just this: lylac. We’re primarily online for now with a strong audience of creative university students and graduates.
On Lylac, you can connect with like-minded creatives and can utilise dedicated features to collaborate and create healthy and sustainable communities. No ads, no fees, just built by creatives, for creatives.
We’re building a space for artists, designers and makers
We weren’t meant to make work like this. Alone, in our rooms, exporting feelings into feeds and hoping something comes back human. Somewhere along the way, being seen replaced being with. We talk constantly, but rarely to each other. Everything is shared, yet nothing really lands.
Loneliness got good at disguising itself. It hides behind followers, views, replies. It tells you you’re fine because people are watching, even if no one is actually there. And when collaboration starts to feel like something you have to earn, justify, or be exceptional enough to deserve, most people just stop asking. Not because they don’t want connection, but because rejection feels built into the system.
None of this is a personal failure. It’s structural. These platforms were never designed for creative people to feel held, or understood, or connected in any meaningful way. They were designed to scale, to extract, to perform well for someone else. And we’ve been paying the emotional cost.
So we’re interested in something slower. Messier. More human. A space where showing up unfinished is normal, where making things with people doesn’t need a pitch deck or permission. Not a solution to loneliness, just a place where it doesn’t have to be invisible.
Trainspotting doesn’t feel like a film you watch. It feels like something you sit with. Something a bit uncomfortable, a bit loud, a bit too honest. Like being young and knowing you’re meant to want more, but not really knowing what “more” is supposed to look like, or how to get there without losing yourself slightly in the process.
What makes it stick isn’t the shock or the chaos or the aesthetics everyone keeps recycling. It’s the fact that nothing really gets tied up. People don’t transform neatly. They fuck up, repeat themselves, disappear, come back. Life doesn’t reward them for learning a lesson. It just keeps moving. And somehow, that feels closer to the truth than most things we’re shown.
Watching it now hits differently. It feels like a reminder that not knowing what you’re doing doesn’t disqualify you from existing, or from belonging. That drifting isn’t failure, it’s just part of the terrain. That being uncertain, anxious, restless… isn’t a personal flaw. It’s shared.
That’s where Lylac sits. In the rawness. In the in-between. We’re about sharing the messy parts, building spaces where creative people don’t have to experience this stuff alone. Life keeps happening, shit still goes wrong, but community doesn’t have to be another thing you’re missing. We can make our own.
we don’t need another space. We need proximity. conversation. shared space.
Lylac is for creatives who want more than just visibility: who want connection, collaboration and community. As creative people, we’re scattered across platforms, with no means to interact with each other.
This is a home for making and belonging, together.
Making used to happen shoulder to shoulder. On studio floors, kitchen tables, workshop counters, sofas in sublets. You learnt by watching someone else work and the atmosphere was 90% of the fun. You stayed longer because someone was still there. Somewhere along way, that proximity disappeared. Now we make alone, in our rooms, with our laptops glowing late into the night, for people who might arrive later, or not at all.
Visibility’s become the goal. Metrics have replaced human moments. But creative work was never meant to feel this quiet, this isolating, this detached from other people. Making has always been social, messy, awkward and human.
So we built something for this. Not for followers, not for performance, but for closeness. For being in the same place again, even if it’s digital. For creatives who want to create together.
Hi tumblr!