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This one means a lot 💥 A Webby for our work with @wikipedia

Because access to free human knowledge is essential. And behind this project was a global community we’re endlessly inspired by.

Congrats to all of our Kin folks and partners at @excetera and @kuro.__ 👏🤝🫶


3
6
3 weeks ago


Delta Locals is live! 🙌 the travel inspiration and planning platform we developed with Delta Air Lines.
Discover exciting destinations around the world, guided by the people who know them best. Go off the beaten path in Tokyo, Patagonia, Los Angeles, Sicily, and more to taste new flavors, chase unforgettable adventures, and immerse yourself in music and culture loved by the community.
More destinations will be added soon, keep an eye out! 👀

Thank you to our amazing Delta partners who believed in and championed this idea. And thank you to our fantastic team, Locals and collaborators who helped bring this to life! ❤️

We’re so proud of this work!

Kin
Co-Founders: @soverseas @xquamx
Creative Directors: @akospapp42 @jeh.min
Senior Creative: @tyl3rh1
Partner Lead: @dejaemma
Executive Producers: @setse @deeaannnaaa
Producer: @whygams
Partner Manager: @martineparris
Digital Creative Director: @brunoarizio
Creative Director, Immersive: @aramique
Creative Technical Director: @benjaminbojko
Design Director: @chris.cyran
Copywriter: Lindsey Lanpher
3D Designer: @clia.lpz
UX Designer: @ghostmeat
Animator: @ema_colombo

Locals
@kalinasilverman
@michaeldonte_
@la_yoselin
@saragiustoo
@nagatacho_sushikanesaka
haruka_springfruit
@antarmachado
@rodrigo_san_martin_rubio
@krleathers

Production Companies
@unit9ltd
@ctzar
@wearemofilm
@wearearis

Technology Partner
@obsess_vr


3
8
6 months ago

Excited to share that we’ve just launched Knowledge is Human, an anthem film celebrating Wikipedia’s 25th anniversary 🎉

Working with the Wikimedia Foundation is an incredible adventure. Their passion for protecting free, reliable, human knowledge is contagious, and we’re proud to have partnered to bring this to life. Since its founding in 2001, Wikipedia has grown to 65+ million articles in 300+ languages, written and edited by over 250,000 volunteers around the world — a living testament to what humans can build together.

We are excited to invite more people to join the mission: to keep knowledge human and help build a better internet for all.

Huge thanks to our amazing teammates and collaborators for your creativity and heart — couldn’t have done it without you 💫

@deeaannnaaa
@lukesacherman
@willgalperin
@brunoarizio
Bothaina Saleh
@louisweeks
@uynairda_
@excetera


3
1
6 months ago

We have a poet on the team. ✨ He also happens to be one of the sharpest strategists we’ve worked with. Meet Chad Young. ✨

Born in Brooklyn to Jamaican parents, Chad has always been drawn to how cultures collide and reinvent themselves—shaped as much by Hot 97 in the Wendy Williams era as by Tamagotchis. As a kid, his family called him “Chadder-box” for his endless questions. That curiosity took him to study ethnography (or, as he puts it, professional question-asking), and into qualitative research—decoding culture for brands like YouTube, Paramount, and Nike—before naturally stepping into brand strategy.

At Kin, he’s helped shape some of our most nuanced work, from Mailchimp’s Bloom Season to Delta’s DEI storytelling and voter rights efforts with All Voting is Local—always bringing rigor, instinct, and a clear point of view.

Since moving to Berlin, Chad’s worked with startups like It’s Complicated, rebranded youth organizations like NaturFreundeJugend, and leaned deeper into a his passion: writing. He’s become a regular at local workshops and readings, and even co-founded a poetry zine, Milk Tooth. This spring, his debut chapbook will be published: Comely the Seed Bereft of Earth’s Ease, and he’s been accepted into an MFA program for creative writing. Bravo Chad! 👏👏

He reassured us—and we exhaled—strategy isn’t going anywhere. He’s just expanding the medium. 🤩


3
16
2 weeks ago

We have a poet on the team. ✨ He also happens to be one of the sharpest strategists we’ve worked with. Meet Chad Young. ✨

Born in Brooklyn to Jamaican parents, Chad has always been drawn to how cultures collide and reinvent themselves—shaped as much by Hot 97 in the Wendy Williams era as by Tamagotchis. As a kid, his family called him “Chadder-box” for his endless questions. That curiosity took him to study ethnography (or, as he puts it, professional question-asking), and into qualitative research—decoding culture for brands like YouTube, Paramount, and Nike—before naturally stepping into brand strategy.

At Kin, he’s helped shape some of our most nuanced work, from Mailchimp’s Bloom Season to Delta’s DEI storytelling and voter rights efforts with All Voting is Local—always bringing rigor, instinct, and a clear point of view.

Since moving to Berlin, Chad’s worked with startups like It’s Complicated, rebranded youth organizations like NaturFreundeJugend, and leaned deeper into a his passion: writing. He’s become a regular at local workshops and readings, and even co-founded a poetry zine, Milk Tooth. This spring, his debut chapbook will be published: Comely the Seed Bereft of Earth’s Ease, and he’s been accepted into an MFA program for creative writing. Bravo Chad! 👏👏

He reassured us—and we exhaled—strategy isn’t going anywhere. He’s just expanding the medium. 🤩


3
16
2 weeks ago

We have a poet on the team. ✨ He also happens to be one of the sharpest strategists we’ve worked with. Meet Chad Young. ✨

Born in Brooklyn to Jamaican parents, Chad has always been drawn to how cultures collide and reinvent themselves—shaped as much by Hot 97 in the Wendy Williams era as by Tamagotchis. As a kid, his family called him “Chadder-box” for his endless questions. That curiosity took him to study ethnography (or, as he puts it, professional question-asking), and into qualitative research—decoding culture for brands like YouTube, Paramount, and Nike—before naturally stepping into brand strategy.

At Kin, he’s helped shape some of our most nuanced work, from Mailchimp’s Bloom Season to Delta’s DEI storytelling and voter rights efforts with All Voting is Local—always bringing rigor, instinct, and a clear point of view.

Since moving to Berlin, Chad’s worked with startups like It’s Complicated, rebranded youth organizations like NaturFreundeJugend, and leaned deeper into a his passion: writing. He’s become a regular at local workshops and readings, and even co-founded a poetry zine, Milk Tooth. This spring, his debut chapbook will be published: Comely the Seed Bereft of Earth’s Ease, and he’s been accepted into an MFA program for creative writing. Bravo Chad! 👏👏

He reassured us—and we exhaled—strategy isn’t going anywhere. He’s just expanding the medium. 🤩


3
16
2 weeks ago

We have a poet on the team. ✨ He also happens to be one of the sharpest strategists we’ve worked with. Meet Chad Young. ✨

Born in Brooklyn to Jamaican parents, Chad has always been drawn to how cultures collide and reinvent themselves—shaped as much by Hot 97 in the Wendy Williams era as by Tamagotchis. As a kid, his family called him “Chadder-box” for his endless questions. That curiosity took him to study ethnography (or, as he puts it, professional question-asking), and into qualitative research—decoding culture for brands like YouTube, Paramount, and Nike—before naturally stepping into brand strategy.

At Kin, he’s helped shape some of our most nuanced work, from Mailchimp’s Bloom Season to Delta’s DEI storytelling and voter rights efforts with All Voting is Local—always bringing rigor, instinct, and a clear point of view.

Since moving to Berlin, Chad’s worked with startups like It’s Complicated, rebranded youth organizations like NaturFreundeJugend, and leaned deeper into a his passion: writing. He’s become a regular at local workshops and readings, and even co-founded a poetry zine, Milk Tooth. This spring, his debut chapbook will be published: Comely the Seed Bereft of Earth’s Ease, and he’s been accepted into an MFA program for creative writing. Bravo Chad! 👏👏

He reassured us—and we exhaled—strategy isn’t going anywhere. He’s just expanding the medium. 🤩


3
16
2 weeks ago

We have a poet on the team. ✨ He also happens to be one of the sharpest strategists we’ve worked with. Meet Chad Young. ✨

Born in Brooklyn to Jamaican parents, Chad has always been drawn to how cultures collide and reinvent themselves—shaped as much by Hot 97 in the Wendy Williams era as by Tamagotchis. As a kid, his family called him “Chadder-box” for his endless questions. That curiosity took him to study ethnography (or, as he puts it, professional question-asking), and into qualitative research—decoding culture for brands like YouTube, Paramount, and Nike—before naturally stepping into brand strategy.

At Kin, he’s helped shape some of our most nuanced work, from Mailchimp’s Bloom Season to Delta’s DEI storytelling and voter rights efforts with All Voting is Local—always bringing rigor, instinct, and a clear point of view.

Since moving to Berlin, Chad’s worked with startups like It’s Complicated, rebranded youth organizations like NaturFreundeJugend, and leaned deeper into a his passion: writing. He’s become a regular at local workshops and readings, and even co-founded a poetry zine, Milk Tooth. This spring, his debut chapbook will be published: Comely the Seed Bereft of Earth’s Ease, and he’s been accepted into an MFA program for creative writing. Bravo Chad! 👏👏

He reassured us—and we exhaled—strategy isn’t going anywhere. He’s just expanding the medium. 🤩


3
16
2 weeks ago


We have a poet on the team. ✨ He also happens to be one of the sharpest strategists we’ve worked with. Meet Chad Young. ✨

Born in Brooklyn to Jamaican parents, Chad has always been drawn to how cultures collide and reinvent themselves—shaped as much by Hot 97 in the Wendy Williams era as by Tamagotchis. As a kid, his family called him “Chadder-box” for his endless questions. That curiosity took him to study ethnography (or, as he puts it, professional question-asking), and into qualitative research—decoding culture for brands like YouTube, Paramount, and Nike—before naturally stepping into brand strategy.

At Kin, he’s helped shape some of our most nuanced work, from Mailchimp’s Bloom Season to Delta’s DEI storytelling and voter rights efforts with All Voting is Local—always bringing rigor, instinct, and a clear point of view.

Since moving to Berlin, Chad’s worked with startups like It’s Complicated, rebranded youth organizations like NaturFreundeJugend, and leaned deeper into a his passion: writing. He’s become a regular at local workshops and readings, and even co-founded a poetry zine, Milk Tooth. This spring, his debut chapbook will be published: Comely the Seed Bereft of Earth’s Ease, and he’s been accepted into an MFA program for creative writing. Bravo Chad! 👏👏

He reassured us—and we exhaled—strategy isn’t going anywhere. He’s just expanding the medium. 🤩


3
16
2 weeks ago

We have a poet on the team. ✨ He also happens to be one of the sharpest strategists we’ve worked with. Meet Chad Young. ✨

Born in Brooklyn to Jamaican parents, Chad has always been drawn to how cultures collide and reinvent themselves—shaped as much by Hot 97 in the Wendy Williams era as by Tamagotchis. As a kid, his family called him “Chadder-box” for his endless questions. That curiosity took him to study ethnography (or, as he puts it, professional question-asking), and into qualitative research—decoding culture for brands like YouTube, Paramount, and Nike—before naturally stepping into brand strategy.

At Kin, he’s helped shape some of our most nuanced work, from Mailchimp’s Bloom Season to Delta’s DEI storytelling and voter rights efforts with All Voting is Local—always bringing rigor, instinct, and a clear point of view.

Since moving to Berlin, Chad’s worked with startups like It’s Complicated, rebranded youth organizations like NaturFreundeJugend, and leaned deeper into a his passion: writing. He’s become a regular at local workshops and readings, and even co-founded a poetry zine, Milk Tooth. This spring, his debut chapbook will be published: Comely the Seed Bereft of Earth’s Ease, and he’s been accepted into an MFA program for creative writing. Bravo Chad! 👏👏

He reassured us—and we exhaled—strategy isn’t going anywhere. He’s just expanding the medium. 🤩


3
16
2 weeks ago

We have a poet on the team. ✨ He also happens to be one of the sharpest strategists we’ve worked with. Meet Chad Young. ✨

Born in Brooklyn to Jamaican parents, Chad has always been drawn to how cultures collide and reinvent themselves—shaped as much by Hot 97 in the Wendy Williams era as by Tamagotchis. As a kid, his family called him “Chadder-box” for his endless questions. That curiosity took him to study ethnography (or, as he puts it, professional question-asking), and into qualitative research—decoding culture for brands like YouTube, Paramount, and Nike—before naturally stepping into brand strategy.

At Kin, he’s helped shape some of our most nuanced work, from Mailchimp’s Bloom Season to Delta’s DEI storytelling and voter rights efforts with All Voting is Local—always bringing rigor, instinct, and a clear point of view.

Since moving to Berlin, Chad’s worked with startups like It’s Complicated, rebranded youth organizations like NaturFreundeJugend, and leaned deeper into a his passion: writing. He’s become a regular at local workshops and readings, and even co-founded a poetry zine, Milk Tooth. This spring, his debut chapbook will be published: Comely the Seed Bereft of Earth’s Ease, and he’s been accepted into an MFA program for creative writing. Bravo Chad! 👏👏

He reassured us—and we exhaled—strategy isn’t going anywhere. He’s just expanding the medium. 🤩


3
16
2 weeks ago

We have a poet on the team. ✨ He also happens to be one of the sharpest strategists we’ve worked with. Meet Chad Young. ✨

Born in Brooklyn to Jamaican parents, Chad has always been drawn to how cultures collide and reinvent themselves—shaped as much by Hot 97 in the Wendy Williams era as by Tamagotchis. As a kid, his family called him “Chadder-box” for his endless questions. That curiosity took him to study ethnography (or, as he puts it, professional question-asking), and into qualitative research—decoding culture for brands like YouTube, Paramount, and Nike—before naturally stepping into brand strategy.

At Kin, he’s helped shape some of our most nuanced work, from Mailchimp’s Bloom Season to Delta’s DEI storytelling and voter rights efforts with All Voting is Local—always bringing rigor, instinct, and a clear point of view.

Since moving to Berlin, Chad’s worked with startups like It’s Complicated, rebranded youth organizations like NaturFreundeJugend, and leaned deeper into a his passion: writing. He’s become a regular at local workshops and readings, and even co-founded a poetry zine, Milk Tooth. This spring, his debut chapbook will be published: Comely the Seed Bereft of Earth’s Ease, and he’s been accepted into an MFA program for creative writing. Bravo Chad! 👏👏

He reassured us—and we exhaled—strategy isn’t going anywhere. He’s just expanding the medium. 🤩


3
16
2 weeks ago

We have a poet on the team. ✨ He also happens to be one of the sharpest strategists we’ve worked with. Meet Chad Young. ✨

Born in Brooklyn to Jamaican parents, Chad has always been drawn to how cultures collide and reinvent themselves—shaped as much by Hot 97 in the Wendy Williams era as by Tamagotchis. As a kid, his family called him “Chadder-box” for his endless questions. That curiosity took him to study ethnography (or, as he puts it, professional question-asking), and into qualitative research—decoding culture for brands like YouTube, Paramount, and Nike—before naturally stepping into brand strategy.

At Kin, he’s helped shape some of our most nuanced work, from Mailchimp’s Bloom Season to Delta’s DEI storytelling and voter rights efforts with All Voting is Local—always bringing rigor, instinct, and a clear point of view.

Since moving to Berlin, Chad’s worked with startups like It’s Complicated, rebranded youth organizations like NaturFreundeJugend, and leaned deeper into a his passion: writing. He’s become a regular at local workshops and readings, and even co-founded a poetry zine, Milk Tooth. This spring, his debut chapbook will be published: Comely the Seed Bereft of Earth’s Ease, and he’s been accepted into an MFA program for creative writing. Bravo Chad! 👏👏

He reassured us—and we exhaled—strategy isn’t going anywhere. He’s just expanding the medium. 🤩


3
16
2 weeks ago

We have a poet on the team. ✨ He also happens to be one of the sharpest strategists we’ve worked with. Meet Chad Young. ✨

Born in Brooklyn to Jamaican parents, Chad has always been drawn to how cultures collide and reinvent themselves—shaped as much by Hot 97 in the Wendy Williams era as by Tamagotchis. As a kid, his family called him “Chadder-box” for his endless questions. That curiosity took him to study ethnography (or, as he puts it, professional question-asking), and into qualitative research—decoding culture for brands like YouTube, Paramount, and Nike—before naturally stepping into brand strategy.

At Kin, he’s helped shape some of our most nuanced work, from Mailchimp’s Bloom Season to Delta’s DEI storytelling and voter rights efforts with All Voting is Local—always bringing rigor, instinct, and a clear point of view.

Since moving to Berlin, Chad’s worked with startups like It’s Complicated, rebranded youth organizations like NaturFreundeJugend, and leaned deeper into a his passion: writing. He’s become a regular at local workshops and readings, and even co-founded a poetry zine, Milk Tooth. This spring, his debut chapbook will be published: Comely the Seed Bereft of Earth’s Ease, and he’s been accepted into an MFA program for creative writing. Bravo Chad! 👏👏

He reassured us—and we exhaled—strategy isn’t going anywhere. He’s just expanding the medium. 🤩


3
16
2 weeks ago

A look back at 'Dead or Alive: Attention is Dead', where we brought together a brilliant room of creatives in New York for a live, energising conversation led by @workwithkin's Kwame Taylor-Hayford (@xquamx) and @johannesleonardo's Jonathan Santana (@santana___j).

Together, they explored what creativity looks like in a world where visibility is easy, but real connection is harder than ever...and why the most powerful ideas today don’t just interrupt culture, they participate in it.

From co-creating with communities to building work that people actually want to engage with, the conversation was a reminder that creativity isn’t disappearing. Instead, it’s evolving into something more meaningful, more collaborative, and more human.

And it’s not enough for brands to watch from the sidelines anymore. The ones that land are the ones creating ideas people want to be part of; built with communities, and not just broadcast to them.

The conversation continues over at D&AD
Hit the link in bio to dive and explore: Is creativity dead or alive?

#dandad26 #keepingcreativityalive #newyork #newyorkcreatives #brandbuilding #branding


139
3
1 months ago


A look back at 'Dead or Alive: Attention is Dead', where we brought together a brilliant room of creatives in New York for a live, energising conversation led by @workwithkin's Kwame Taylor-Hayford (@xquamx) and @johannesleonardo's Jonathan Santana (@santana___j).

Together, they explored what creativity looks like in a world where visibility is easy, but real connection is harder than ever...and why the most powerful ideas today don’t just interrupt culture, they participate in it.

From co-creating with communities to building work that people actually want to engage with, the conversation was a reminder that creativity isn’t disappearing. Instead, it’s evolving into something more meaningful, more collaborative, and more human.

And it’s not enough for brands to watch from the sidelines anymore. The ones that land are the ones creating ideas people want to be part of; built with communities, and not just broadcast to them.

The conversation continues over at D&AD
Hit the link in bio to dive and explore: Is creativity dead or alive?

#dandad26 #keepingcreativityalive #newyork #newyorkcreatives #brandbuilding #branding


139
3
1 months ago

A look back at 'Dead or Alive: Attention is Dead', where we brought together a brilliant room of creatives in New York for a live, energising conversation led by @workwithkin's Kwame Taylor-Hayford (@xquamx) and @johannesleonardo's Jonathan Santana (@santana___j).

Together, they explored what creativity looks like in a world where visibility is easy, but real connection is harder than ever...and why the most powerful ideas today don’t just interrupt culture, they participate in it.

From co-creating with communities to building work that people actually want to engage with, the conversation was a reminder that creativity isn’t disappearing. Instead, it’s evolving into something more meaningful, more collaborative, and more human.

And it’s not enough for brands to watch from the sidelines anymore. The ones that land are the ones creating ideas people want to be part of; built with communities, and not just broadcast to them.

The conversation continues over at D&AD
Hit the link in bio to dive and explore: Is creativity dead or alive?

#dandad26 #keepingcreativityalive #newyork #newyorkcreatives #brandbuilding #branding


139
3
1 months ago

A look back at 'Dead or Alive: Attention is Dead', where we brought together a brilliant room of creatives in New York for a live, energising conversation led by @workwithkin's Kwame Taylor-Hayford (@xquamx) and @johannesleonardo's Jonathan Santana (@santana___j).

Together, they explored what creativity looks like in a world where visibility is easy, but real connection is harder than ever...and why the most powerful ideas today don’t just interrupt culture, they participate in it.

From co-creating with communities to building work that people actually want to engage with, the conversation was a reminder that creativity isn’t disappearing. Instead, it’s evolving into something more meaningful, more collaborative, and more human.

And it’s not enough for brands to watch from the sidelines anymore. The ones that land are the ones creating ideas people want to be part of; built with communities, and not just broadcast to them.

The conversation continues over at D&AD
Hit the link in bio to dive and explore: Is creativity dead or alive?

#dandad26 #keepingcreativityalive #newyork #newyorkcreatives #brandbuilding #branding


139
3
1 months ago

A look back at 'Dead or Alive: Attention is Dead', where we brought together a brilliant room of creatives in New York for a live, energising conversation led by @workwithkin's Kwame Taylor-Hayford (@xquamx) and @johannesleonardo's Jonathan Santana (@santana___j).

Together, they explored what creativity looks like in a world where visibility is easy, but real connection is harder than ever...and why the most powerful ideas today don’t just interrupt culture, they participate in it.

From co-creating with communities to building work that people actually want to engage with, the conversation was a reminder that creativity isn’t disappearing. Instead, it’s evolving into something more meaningful, more collaborative, and more human.

And it’s not enough for brands to watch from the sidelines anymore. The ones that land are the ones creating ideas people want to be part of; built with communities, and not just broadcast to them.

The conversation continues over at D&AD
Hit the link in bio to dive and explore: Is creativity dead or alive?

#dandad26 #keepingcreativityalive #newyork #newyorkcreatives #brandbuilding #branding


139
3
1 months ago

A look back at 'Dead or Alive: Attention is Dead', where we brought together a brilliant room of creatives in New York for a live, energising conversation led by @workwithkin's Kwame Taylor-Hayford (@xquamx) and @johannesleonardo's Jonathan Santana (@santana___j).

Together, they explored what creativity looks like in a world where visibility is easy, but real connection is harder than ever...and why the most powerful ideas today don’t just interrupt culture, they participate in it.

From co-creating with communities to building work that people actually want to engage with, the conversation was a reminder that creativity isn’t disappearing. Instead, it’s evolving into something more meaningful, more collaborative, and more human.

And it’s not enough for brands to watch from the sidelines anymore. The ones that land are the ones creating ideas people want to be part of; built with communities, and not just broadcast to them.

The conversation continues over at D&AD
Hit the link in bio to dive and explore: Is creativity dead or alive?

#dandad26 #keepingcreativityalive #newyork #newyorkcreatives #brandbuilding #branding


139
3
1 months ago

A look back at 'Dead or Alive: Attention is Dead', where we brought together a brilliant room of creatives in New York for a live, energising conversation led by @workwithkin's Kwame Taylor-Hayford (@xquamx) and @johannesleonardo's Jonathan Santana (@santana___j).

Together, they explored what creativity looks like in a world where visibility is easy, but real connection is harder than ever...and why the most powerful ideas today don’t just interrupt culture, they participate in it.

From co-creating with communities to building work that people actually want to engage with, the conversation was a reminder that creativity isn’t disappearing. Instead, it’s evolving into something more meaningful, more collaborative, and more human.

And it’s not enough for brands to watch from the sidelines anymore. The ones that land are the ones creating ideas people want to be part of; built with communities, and not just broadcast to them.

The conversation continues over at D&AD
Hit the link in bio to dive and explore: Is creativity dead or alive?

#dandad26 #keepingcreativityalive #newyork #newyorkcreatives #brandbuilding #branding


139
3
1 months ago


A look back at 'Dead or Alive: Attention is Dead', where we brought together a brilliant room of creatives in New York for a live, energising conversation led by @workwithkin's Kwame Taylor-Hayford (@xquamx) and @johannesleonardo's Jonathan Santana (@santana___j).

Together, they explored what creativity looks like in a world where visibility is easy, but real connection is harder than ever...and why the most powerful ideas today don’t just interrupt culture, they participate in it.

From co-creating with communities to building work that people actually want to engage with, the conversation was a reminder that creativity isn’t disappearing. Instead, it’s evolving into something more meaningful, more collaborative, and more human.

And it’s not enough for brands to watch from the sidelines anymore. The ones that land are the ones creating ideas people want to be part of; built with communities, and not just broadcast to them.

The conversation continues over at D&AD
Hit the link in bio to dive and explore: Is creativity dead or alive?

#dandad26 #keepingcreativityalive #newyork #newyorkcreatives #brandbuilding #branding


139
3
1 months ago

FOUR nominations at the @thewebbyawards ✨ For work we truly believe in: our Wikipedia 25: Knowledge is Human campaign.

Proud of our Kin team. Grateful for our collaborators at @wikipedia And honored to help tell a story about something essential: knowledge for all.

If you believe in it too, we’d love your support—vote at the links in bio 👆

@lukesacherman
@willgalperin
@deeaannnaaa
@louisweeks
@excetera
@uynairda_
@kureau.work


3
2
1 months ago

Working with the Obama Foundation over the past couple of years was an honor 💖

We couldn’t be prouder of the work—helping raise awareness for the Foundation’s impact and the opening of the Presidential Center on Chicago’s South Side—while sharing a message that feels especially resonant right now: We Got Work To Do.

Forever grateful for our partners at the Foundation, media genius @partandsum and our beloved Kin folks who brought this campaign to life ✨

@charleshallstudio
@shabazzlarkin
@deeaannnaaa
@bhmarcus1
@rodneyluthaking
@killls


3
1
1 months ago

Congrats to our co-founder Kwame on this special recognition ❤️‍🔥💫 We couldn’t agree more Adweek! 😁

Kwame has a rare gift for building spaces where differences are celebrated, perspectives collide in the best way, and people feel empowered to do their best work. Every room, every team, every project is better because of it.

Proud is an understatement.
Read more via @adweek → link in bio


3
3
2 months ago

“Sardonic Psychedelia” 💋💸🥀😅 is the name of the visual world we created for “Intuit Presents: Life-ing” with the brilliant @emy_su A colorful world that wears its emotions on its sleeves. Texture, big expressions, and quirky characters abound to complement the hilarious bits our comedians develop.


3
4
2 months ago

“Sardonic Psychedelia” 💋💸🥀😅 is the name of the visual world we created for “Intuit Presents: Life-ing” with the brilliant @emy_su A colorful world that wears its emotions on its sleeves. Texture, big expressions, and quirky characters abound to complement the hilarious bits our comedians develop.


3
4
2 months ago

“Sardonic Psychedelia” 💋💸🥀😅 is the name of the visual world we created for “Intuit Presents: Life-ing” with the brilliant @emy_su A colorful world that wears its emotions on its sleeves. Texture, big expressions, and quirky characters abound to complement the hilarious bits our comedians develop.


3
4
2 months ago

“Sardonic Psychedelia” 💋💸🥀😅 is the name of the visual world we created for “Intuit Presents: Life-ing” with the brilliant @emy_su A colorful world that wears its emotions on its sleeves. Texture, big expressions, and quirky characters abound to complement the hilarious bits our comedians develop.


3
4
2 months ago

🙌 Please say hello to Emily Su, one of Kin’s favorite collaborators and longtime go-to illustrator ✨ Over the years she’s brought her sharp eye and playful imagination to projects like Mailchimp’s “Give Where You Live” and Intuit’s comedy series “Life-ing.” When Emily’s involved, the work instantly gets a little smarter, a little stranger, and a lot more fun.

Raised in the Pacific Northwest to a Thai father and an American mother, Emily first thought her future was in film. She studied production at NYU and spent her early days on sets like The Daily Show with Jon Stewart and Saturday Night Live. But it didn’t take long to realize she was less interested in organizing the magic than making it.

That realization led her through a wonderfully eclectic creative path — from BUCK to London’s stop-motion scene building miniature worlds as a fabricator and production designer, to studying graphic design in Sweden before fully embracing illustration and digital storytelling.

Today Emily works across an almost unfair number of mediums: illustration systems, motion and animation, AR/VR, experiential design, editorial work for The New Yorker and The New York Times, narrative design for video games (including “Let’s! Revolution!” BUCK’s colorful puzzle adventure game), and because her talent has no limits, handmade rugs!

A self-described rolling stone, Emily has lived in Portland, New York, Los Angeles, London, and Seoul, and she’s not done yet.

Her motto: “You are always allowed to redraw your coastlines.” ✏️


218
52
2 months ago

🙌 Please say hello to Emily Su, one of Kin’s favorite collaborators and longtime go-to illustrator ✨ Over the years she’s brought her sharp eye and playful imagination to projects like Mailchimp’s “Give Where You Live” and Intuit’s comedy series “Life-ing.” When Emily’s involved, the work instantly gets a little smarter, a little stranger, and a lot more fun.

Raised in the Pacific Northwest to a Thai father and an American mother, Emily first thought her future was in film. She studied production at NYU and spent her early days on sets like The Daily Show with Jon Stewart and Saturday Night Live. But it didn’t take long to realize she was less interested in organizing the magic than making it.

That realization led her through a wonderfully eclectic creative path — from BUCK to London’s stop-motion scene building miniature worlds as a fabricator and production designer, to studying graphic design in Sweden before fully embracing illustration and digital storytelling.

Today Emily works across an almost unfair number of mediums: illustration systems, motion and animation, AR/VR, experiential design, editorial work for The New Yorker and The New York Times, narrative design for video games (including “Let’s! Revolution!” BUCK’s colorful puzzle adventure game), and because her talent has no limits, handmade rugs!

A self-described rolling stone, Emily has lived in Portland, New York, Los Angeles, London, and Seoul, and she’s not done yet.

Her motto: “You are always allowed to redraw your coastlines.” ✏️


218
52
2 months ago

🙌 Please say hello to Emily Su, one of Kin’s favorite collaborators and longtime go-to illustrator ✨ Over the years she’s brought her sharp eye and playful imagination to projects like Mailchimp’s “Give Where You Live” and Intuit’s comedy series “Life-ing.” When Emily’s involved, the work instantly gets a little smarter, a little stranger, and a lot more fun.

Raised in the Pacific Northwest to a Thai father and an American mother, Emily first thought her future was in film. She studied production at NYU and spent her early days on sets like The Daily Show with Jon Stewart and Saturday Night Live. But it didn’t take long to realize she was less interested in organizing the magic than making it.

That realization led her through a wonderfully eclectic creative path — from BUCK to London’s stop-motion scene building miniature worlds as a fabricator and production designer, to studying graphic design in Sweden before fully embracing illustration and digital storytelling.

Today Emily works across an almost unfair number of mediums: illustration systems, motion and animation, AR/VR, experiential design, editorial work for The New Yorker and The New York Times, narrative design for video games (including “Let’s! Revolution!” BUCK’s colorful puzzle adventure game), and because her talent has no limits, handmade rugs!

A self-described rolling stone, Emily has lived in Portland, New York, Los Angeles, London, and Seoul, and she’s not done yet.

Her motto: “You are always allowed to redraw your coastlines.” ✏️


218
52
2 months ago

🙌 Please say hello to Emily Su, one of Kin’s favorite collaborators and longtime go-to illustrator ✨ Over the years she’s brought her sharp eye and playful imagination to projects like Mailchimp’s “Give Where You Live” and Intuit’s comedy series “Life-ing.” When Emily’s involved, the work instantly gets a little smarter, a little stranger, and a lot more fun.

Raised in the Pacific Northwest to a Thai father and an American mother, Emily first thought her future was in film. She studied production at NYU and spent her early days on sets like The Daily Show with Jon Stewart and Saturday Night Live. But it didn’t take long to realize she was less interested in organizing the magic than making it.

That realization led her through a wonderfully eclectic creative path — from BUCK to London’s stop-motion scene building miniature worlds as a fabricator and production designer, to studying graphic design in Sweden before fully embracing illustration and digital storytelling.

Today Emily works across an almost unfair number of mediums: illustration systems, motion and animation, AR/VR, experiential design, editorial work for The New Yorker and The New York Times, narrative design for video games (including “Let’s! Revolution!” BUCK’s colorful puzzle adventure game), and because her talent has no limits, handmade rugs!

A self-described rolling stone, Emily has lived in Portland, New York, Los Angeles, London, and Seoul, and she’s not done yet.

Her motto: “You are always allowed to redraw your coastlines.” ✏️


218
52
2 months ago

🙌 Please say hello to Emily Su, one of Kin’s favorite collaborators and longtime go-to illustrator ✨ Over the years she’s brought her sharp eye and playful imagination to projects like Mailchimp’s “Give Where You Live” and Intuit’s comedy series “Life-ing.” When Emily’s involved, the work instantly gets a little smarter, a little stranger, and a lot more fun.

Raised in the Pacific Northwest to a Thai father and an American mother, Emily first thought her future was in film. She studied production at NYU and spent her early days on sets like The Daily Show with Jon Stewart and Saturday Night Live. But it didn’t take long to realize she was less interested in organizing the magic than making it.

That realization led her through a wonderfully eclectic creative path — from BUCK to London’s stop-motion scene building miniature worlds as a fabricator and production designer, to studying graphic design in Sweden before fully embracing illustration and digital storytelling.

Today Emily works across an almost unfair number of mediums: illustration systems, motion and animation, AR/VR, experiential design, editorial work for The New Yorker and The New York Times, narrative design for video games (including “Let’s! Revolution!” BUCK’s colorful puzzle adventure game), and because her talent has no limits, handmade rugs!

A self-described rolling stone, Emily has lived in Portland, New York, Los Angeles, London, and Seoul, and she’s not done yet.

Her motto: “You are always allowed to redraw your coastlines.” ✏️


218
52
2 months ago

🙌 Please say hello to Emily Su, one of Kin’s favorite collaborators and longtime go-to illustrator ✨ Over the years she’s brought her sharp eye and playful imagination to projects like Mailchimp’s “Give Where You Live” and Intuit’s comedy series “Life-ing.” When Emily’s involved, the work instantly gets a little smarter, a little stranger, and a lot more fun.

Raised in the Pacific Northwest to a Thai father and an American mother, Emily first thought her future was in film. She studied production at NYU and spent her early days on sets like The Daily Show with Jon Stewart and Saturday Night Live. But it didn’t take long to realize she was less interested in organizing the magic than making it.

That realization led her through a wonderfully eclectic creative path — from BUCK to London’s stop-motion scene building miniature worlds as a fabricator and production designer, to studying graphic design in Sweden before fully embracing illustration and digital storytelling.

Today Emily works across an almost unfair number of mediums: illustration systems, motion and animation, AR/VR, experiential design, editorial work for The New Yorker and The New York Times, narrative design for video games (including “Let’s! Revolution!” BUCK’s colorful puzzle adventure game), and because her talent has no limits, handmade rugs!

A self-described rolling stone, Emily has lived in Portland, New York, Los Angeles, London, and Seoul, and she’s not done yet.

Her motto: “You are always allowed to redraw your coastlines.” ✏️


218
52
2 months ago

🙌 Please say hello to Emily Su, one of Kin’s favorite collaborators and longtime go-to illustrator ✨ Over the years she’s brought her sharp eye and playful imagination to projects like Mailchimp’s “Give Where You Live” and Intuit’s comedy series “Life-ing.” When Emily’s involved, the work instantly gets a little smarter, a little stranger, and a lot more fun.

Raised in the Pacific Northwest to a Thai father and an American mother, Emily first thought her future was in film. She studied production at NYU and spent her early days on sets like The Daily Show with Jon Stewart and Saturday Night Live. But it didn’t take long to realize she was less interested in organizing the magic than making it.

That realization led her through a wonderfully eclectic creative path — from BUCK to London’s stop-motion scene building miniature worlds as a fabricator and production designer, to studying graphic design in Sweden before fully embracing illustration and digital storytelling.

Today Emily works across an almost unfair number of mediums: illustration systems, motion and animation, AR/VR, experiential design, editorial work for The New Yorker and The New York Times, narrative design for video games (including “Let’s! Revolution!” BUCK’s colorful puzzle adventure game), and because her talent has no limits, handmade rugs!

A self-described rolling stone, Emily has lived in Portland, New York, Los Angeles, London, and Seoul, and she’s not done yet.

Her motto: “You are always allowed to redraw your coastlines.” ✏️


218
52
2 months ago

🙌 Please say hello to Emily Su, one of Kin’s favorite collaborators and longtime go-to illustrator ✨ Over the years she’s brought her sharp eye and playful imagination to projects like Mailchimp’s “Give Where You Live” and Intuit’s comedy series “Life-ing.” When Emily’s involved, the work instantly gets a little smarter, a little stranger, and a lot more fun.

Raised in the Pacific Northwest to a Thai father and an American mother, Emily first thought her future was in film. She studied production at NYU and spent her early days on sets like The Daily Show with Jon Stewart and Saturday Night Live. But it didn’t take long to realize she was less interested in organizing the magic than making it.

That realization led her through a wonderfully eclectic creative path — from BUCK to London’s stop-motion scene building miniature worlds as a fabricator and production designer, to studying graphic design in Sweden before fully embracing illustration and digital storytelling.

Today Emily works across an almost unfair number of mediums: illustration systems, motion and animation, AR/VR, experiential design, editorial work for The New Yorker and The New York Times, narrative design for video games (including “Let’s! Revolution!” BUCK’s colorful puzzle adventure game), and because her talent has no limits, handmade rugs!

A self-described rolling stone, Emily has lived in Portland, New York, Los Angeles, London, and Seoul, and she’s not done yet.

Her motto: “You are always allowed to redraw your coastlines.” ✏️


218
52
2 months ago

🙌 Please say hello to Emily Su, one of Kin’s favorite collaborators and longtime go-to illustrator ✨ Over the years she’s brought her sharp eye and playful imagination to projects like Mailchimp’s “Give Where You Live” and Intuit’s comedy series “Life-ing.” When Emily’s involved, the work instantly gets a little smarter, a little stranger, and a lot more fun.

Raised in the Pacific Northwest to a Thai father and an American mother, Emily first thought her future was in film. She studied production at NYU and spent her early days on sets like The Daily Show with Jon Stewart and Saturday Night Live. But it didn’t take long to realize she was less interested in organizing the magic than making it.

That realization led her through a wonderfully eclectic creative path — from BUCK to London’s stop-motion scene building miniature worlds as a fabricator and production designer, to studying graphic design in Sweden before fully embracing illustration and digital storytelling.

Today Emily works across an almost unfair number of mediums: illustration systems, motion and animation, AR/VR, experiential design, editorial work for The New Yorker and The New York Times, narrative design for video games (including “Let’s! Revolution!” BUCK’s colorful puzzle adventure game), and because her talent has no limits, handmade rugs!

A self-described rolling stone, Emily has lived in Portland, New York, Los Angeles, London, and Seoul, and she’s not done yet.

Her motto: “You are always allowed to redraw your coastlines.” ✏️


218
52
2 months ago

🙌 Please say hello to Emily Su, one of Kin’s favorite collaborators and longtime go-to illustrator ✨ Over the years she’s brought her sharp eye and playful imagination to projects like Mailchimp’s “Give Where You Live” and Intuit’s comedy series “Life-ing.” When Emily’s involved, the work instantly gets a little smarter, a little stranger, and a lot more fun.

Raised in the Pacific Northwest to a Thai father and an American mother, Emily first thought her future was in film. She studied production at NYU and spent her early days on sets like The Daily Show with Jon Stewart and Saturday Night Live. But it didn’t take long to realize she was less interested in organizing the magic than making it.

That realization led her through a wonderfully eclectic creative path — from BUCK to London’s stop-motion scene building miniature worlds as a fabricator and production designer, to studying graphic design in Sweden before fully embracing illustration and digital storytelling.

Today Emily works across an almost unfair number of mediums: illustration systems, motion and animation, AR/VR, experiential design, editorial work for The New Yorker and The New York Times, narrative design for video games (including “Let’s! Revolution!” BUCK’s colorful puzzle adventure game), and because her talent has no limits, handmade rugs!

A self-described rolling stone, Emily has lived in Portland, New York, Los Angeles, London, and Seoul, and she’s not done yet.

Her motto: “You are always allowed to redraw your coastlines.” ✏️


218
52
2 months ago

🙌 Please say hello to Emily Su, one of Kin’s favorite collaborators and longtime go-to illustrator ✨ Over the years she’s brought her sharp eye and playful imagination to projects like Mailchimp’s “Give Where You Live” and Intuit’s comedy series “Life-ing.” When Emily’s involved, the work instantly gets a little smarter, a little stranger, and a lot more fun.

Raised in the Pacific Northwest to a Thai father and an American mother, Emily first thought her future was in film. She studied production at NYU and spent her early days on sets like The Daily Show with Jon Stewart and Saturday Night Live. But it didn’t take long to realize she was less interested in organizing the magic than making it.

That realization led her through a wonderfully eclectic creative path — from BUCK to London’s stop-motion scene building miniature worlds as a fabricator and production designer, to studying graphic design in Sweden before fully embracing illustration and digital storytelling.

Today Emily works across an almost unfair number of mediums: illustration systems, motion and animation, AR/VR, experiential design, editorial work for The New Yorker and The New York Times, narrative design for video games (including “Let’s! Revolution!” BUCK’s colorful puzzle adventure game), and because her talent has no limits, handmade rugs!

A self-described rolling stone, Emily has lived in Portland, New York, Los Angeles, London, and Seoul, and she’s not done yet.

Her motto: “You are always allowed to redraw your coastlines.” ✏️


218
52
2 months ago

🙌 Please say hello to Emily Su, one of Kin’s favorite collaborators and longtime go-to illustrator ✨ Over the years she’s brought her sharp eye and playful imagination to projects like Mailchimp’s “Give Where You Live” and Intuit’s comedy series “Life-ing.” When Emily’s involved, the work instantly gets a little smarter, a little stranger, and a lot more fun.

Raised in the Pacific Northwest to a Thai father and an American mother, Emily first thought her future was in film. She studied production at NYU and spent her early days on sets like The Daily Show with Jon Stewart and Saturday Night Live. But it didn’t take long to realize she was less interested in organizing the magic than making it.

That realization led her through a wonderfully eclectic creative path — from BUCK to London’s stop-motion scene building miniature worlds as a fabricator and production designer, to studying graphic design in Sweden before fully embracing illustration and digital storytelling.

Today Emily works across an almost unfair number of mediums: illustration systems, motion and animation, AR/VR, experiential design, editorial work for The New Yorker and The New York Times, narrative design for video games (including “Let’s! Revolution!” BUCK’s colorful puzzle adventure game), and because her talent has no limits, handmade rugs!

A self-described rolling stone, Emily has lived in Portland, New York, Los Angeles, London, and Seoul, and she’s not done yet.

Her motto: “You are always allowed to redraw your coastlines.” ✏️


218
52
2 months ago

Lately the work has been feeling really special. Different talents, one hand. Thankful for our Kin team. 🙌 @klairqqq @kareemmiller @willgalperin @lukesacherman @emy_su @evierows amalia, baroosh, and more 💫


3
7
2 months ago

Our founder Sophie joined @katie.kempner for a beautiful conversation about building Kin and the ideas that guide our work.

They talk about the power of community, the value of independence, how purpose-driven work has evolved, and what it really takes to build something from the ground up with your people.

Give it a listen 💫 link in bio
And keep exploring — Katie’s podcast features conversations with truly inspiring women.


3
2 months ago


View Instagram Stories in Secret

The Instagram Story Viewer is an easy tool that lets you secretly watch and save Instagram stories, videos, photos, or IGTV. With this service, you can download content and enjoy it offline whenever you like. If you find something interesting on Instagram that you’d like to check out later or want to view stories while staying anonymous, our Viewer is perfect for you. Anonstories offers an excellent solution for keeping your identity hidden. Instagram first launched the Stories feature in August 2023, which was quickly adopted by other platforms due to its engaging, time-sensitive format. Stories let users share quick updates, whether photos, videos, or selfies, enhanced with text, emojis, or filters, and are visible for only 24 hours. This limited time frame creates high engagement compared to regular posts. In today’s world, Stories are one of the most popular ways to connect and communicate on social media. However, when you view a Story, the creator can see your name in their viewer list, which may be a privacy concern. What if you wish to browse Stories without being noticed? Here’s where Anonstories becomes useful. It allows you to watch public Instagram content without revealing your identity. Simply enter the username of the profile you’re curious about, and the tool will display their latest Stories. Features of Anonstories Viewer: - Anonymous Browsing: Watch Stories without showing up on the viewer list. - No Account Needed: View public content without signing up for an Instagram account. - Content Download: Save any Stories content directly to your device for offline use. - View Highlights: Access Instagram Highlights, even beyond the 24-hour window. - Repost Monitoring: Track the reposts or engagement levels on Stories for personal profiles. Limitations: - This tool works only with public accounts; private accounts remain inaccessible. Benefits: - Privacy-Friendly: Watch any Instagram content without being noticed. - Simple and Easy: No app installation or registration required. - Exclusive Tools: Download and manage content in ways Instagram doesn’t offer.

Advantages of Anonstories

Explore IG Stories Privately

Keep track of Instagram updates discreetly while protecting your privacy and staying anonymous.


Private Instagram Viewer

View profiles and photos anonymously with ease using the Private Profile Viewer.


Story Viewer for Free

This free tool allows you to view Instagram Stories anonymously, ensuring your activity remains hidden from the story uploader.

Frequently asked questions

 
Anonymity

Anonstories lets users view Instagram stories without alerting the creator.

 
Device Compatibility

Works seamlessly on iOS, Android, Windows, macOS, and modern browsers like Chrome and Safari.

 
Safety and Privacy

Prioritizes secure, anonymous browsing without requiring login credentials.

 
No Registration

Users can view public stories by simply entering a username—no account needed.

 
Supported Formats

Downloads photos (JPEG) and videos (MP4) with ease.

 
Cost

The service is free to use.

 
Private Accounts

Content from private accounts can only be accessed by followers.

 
File Usage

Files are for personal or educational use only and must comply with copyright rules.

 
How It Works

Enter a public username to view or download stories. The service generates direct links for saving content locally.