I don’t know exactly where HaloGrip is going
I just know where it started
One small idea
One uncomfortable feeling
One problem that didn’t feel dramatic enough to be called a problem, but never felt calm enough to ignore
So I started building
AI generated render of first concept
Right now, I’m focused on one core idea
Creating a grounded base for gas canister stoves so a cooking setup feels intentional instead of fragile
But this idea hasn’t stayed small in my head
It’s already evolved from a simple “set your canister here” device into a mountable plate hub with an interface that fits over the top of the gas canister
I’m not even sure I can call it modular yet if there’s only one attachment
But that’s the direction
So here’s the honest part
This isn’t a finished idea or a promise
It’s a direction
The plan is simple
Launch the HaloGrip hub and stove attachment on Kickstarter March 1
After that, the future could mean interfaces for almost anything
A cup holder that doesn’t live in your chair
A camera mount that doesn’t fall over
A way to attach gear without putting it on the ground
A stable connection point for real camp setups, not perfect Instagram ones
Real-world stability
I’m not pretending I know exactly where it goes yet
I’m building it in public
Learning in real time
Testing
Breaking things
Fixing them
Changing my mind when it makes the system better, not messier
And I actually like that
Because this isn’t about pretending I have a master plan
It’s about solving a feeling I already had and just accepted as normal
Hovering near a stove instead of relaxing
Repositioning a pot six times
Thinking “this feels sketchy” and cooking anyway
That’s why I’m building HaloGrip
If someone ends up here and actually reads this far, I want your ideas
Your weird concepts
Your “have you thought about this” messages
Your experiences
I’m building this for real people
I’m a nurse at heart
My goal is to make things feel easier, safer, and calmer in the real world
So I’m here
And I’m listening
And this is just the beginning

