A handshake between people and the people who make things by hand.
Fyndo isn’t a marketplace of finished goods. It’s the meeting place where you describe what you want made, and an artisan answers with their hands.
If you have an idea
You bring the idea, the dimensions, the budget — even just a rough sketch. Artisans take it from there.
Describe your idea
01Post a request with photos, dimensions, materials, and your budget. The clearer your brief, the more focused the proposals you receive.
Receive personal proposals
02Artisans whose craft matches your request reply with a quote, an estimated timeline, and links to their previous work.
Pick your maker
03Accept a proposal, message the artisan directly, and work through the details together until the piece is exactly as you wanted.
A quiet promise
The hands that make it
are the ones who answer you.
If you make things by hand
Build an honest profile, show your samples, and reply to people commissioning work in your craft. Custom pieces, real introductions.
Set up an honest profile
01Tell people who you are, what you make, and where you make it. A real photo and a few work samples are usually enough.
Add a few work samples
02Upload pieces you've already made — finished commissions, studio shots, anything that shows your craft. Buyers choose by what they see.
Reply to requests in your craft
03Browse new requests in categories you work in. Send a short, kind proposal — the people on Fyndo aren't shopping a catalog, they're picking a maker.
A few things people ask before they post.
Is Fyndo free to use?+
Yes — posting requests, browsing artisans, and sending proposals are all free. Fyndo doesn't take a cut of the commission.
Who pays for the piece?+
Buyer and artisan agree on the price inside the proposal and arrange payment directly. Fyndo is the introduction, not the marketplace cashier.
Can I be both a buyer and an artisan?+
Absolutely. When you register you can pick either role, or both. You can post requests and offer your craft from the same account.
How do I know an artisan is real?+
Every profile shows a real name, a portrait if they choose to share one, and previous work samples. You can also message the artisan before committing.
What can I commission?+
Pretty much anything made by hand: ceramics, woodwork, jewelry, textiles, leather, glass, metalwork, paper, painting — and a catch-all 'other' for the unusual.