Opening October 2026

What would you do differently if you could see every week of your life at once?

The timeframe — by Own Your 100. An archival print that maps a century of human life in weeks. Personalized with your birth year. Designed to last as long as the years it holds.

Join the founding list →

Early access + founding pricing when the timeframe opens in October 2026.

A glimpse of the shape — each row a year, each square a week

The artifact

One row, one year.

A long human life, laid out where you can see it.

The timeframe is a single sheet — the years of a long human life running down the side, the weeks across. Your birth year is at the top. The rest is yours: small squares to mark by hand, week by week, as you live them.

Most days the mark is small. Whichever pen is on the counter. A dot, a slash, a circle, a single word if the week asks for one. Some weeks the mark is made in passing, the way one might wind a watch. Some weeks the marking takes a moment, and the moment is the entire thing.

That is what the timeframe does. It holds the years you have, on the wall, where they can be marked as they happen.

Why this exists

The long view, made visible.

There is a way of thinking about time that has been quietly returning. Not the productivity-coach version — every week optimized, every hour accounted for. Something older.

The long view. The horizon that includes the people who came before, and the people who will come after. A century-sized frame for a life lived inside it.

Most days, none of it is visible. There is just this week. This Sunday morning, this Wednesday meeting, this conversation that needs to happen. The shape of the longer arc disappears into the small foreground of the week.

The timeframe puts the shape back. Not as a countdown. Not as a memorial. As the long view made visible — the years already lived, the years yet to come, the place where the present sits between them. The grandparents are implied in the top rows. The grandchildren are implied in the bottom. The person in the middle is the person looking at the wall.

What people who live with the artifact describe is usually some version of quiet. The kind of quiet that arrives when something accurate finally lands.

Made to last

Lumaprints archival matte. Lignin-free, museum-grade. Archival pigment ink, light-fast for a century or more of indoor wall conditions. Designed to outlast its first owner.

Personalized

Your birth year is the top row. The rows of your first decade are the rows of your first decade. A generic poster shows you what a lifetime shape looks like; a personalized one shows you yours.

Intentionally analog

No app. No login. No subscription. No data collected. The timeframe will not ping you, sync to a cloud, or disappear when an operating system updates. Paper. Ink. A wall.

What opens in October

Five configurations.

The same artifact, shaped to who you live with.

the Standard timeframe

A century of one human life, personalized to the birth year. For your own wall — or the person whose wall needs one.

the Heritage timeframe

Five generations on one print. The lifetimes of those who came before, laid out together with the lifetime that includes them.

the Family timeframe

Two or three lives on one print. A partner. A child. The years that overlap are the years actually shared.

the Companion timeframe

A human lifetime and an animal’s lifetime, to scale. Because fifteen years is a long time when it sits next to a century on a wall.

the Perennial timeframe

A longer arc for those who plan beyond the round century. A grandparent’s gift for a newborn, sized to outlast more than one round of decades.

Pricing finalizes ahead of the October open. Founding-list members hear first.

An honest object at the moments that ask for one.

A 50th birthdayA new grandchildA retirementAn empty-nest yearA long-awaited moveThe year after a parentA milestone anniversaryA first dog’s older yearsFor myself, this year

Frequently asked

What is the timeframe?+

An archival print, by Own Your 100, mapping a century of one human life. The years run down the side; the weeks across. Personalized with your birth year — the rows of your first decade are the rows of your first decade. Marked by hand, week by week, on a wall.

Why a hundred years?+

A child born today could live a hundred years. The frame holds enough of the years that almost any reader can locate themselves on the sheet, and the rows past a likely lifespan exist as the shape of a future the artifact does not insist on filling. Some lives end earlier; some continue past a century. The timeframe holds the years either way.

Is this a memento mori? Won’t it be morbid to live with?+

It is closer to a globe than to a tombstone. Memento mori objects belong to a Renaissance lineage and have their place in that lineage. The timeframe is a different object. The lifetime is observational — a shape on a wall, not a countdown. People who live with one report the opposite of morbidity: the artifact becomes ordinary within a few weeks, and what stays is the marking — the small weekly act of saying I was here this week.

Where should I put it on the wall?+

A room you walk past most days. Kitchen, hallway, office, stair landing. Not the guest room. Not the closet. The timeframe only works if you see it; it does not need to be in the most-trafficked room, but it should be in a room you live in.

Is it OK to skip weeks?+

Yes. This is the most common worry and the least important one. The timeframe has no rules. Mark when you remember. Don’t mark when you forget. The page does not keep score. There is no streak.

Is there a digital companion or app?+

No, and not ever — by design. The timeframe is intentionally analog, forever. The marking happens by hand because the marking by hand is part of the meaning. The artifact will not ping you, track your data, or disappear when an operating system updates.

When does the timeframe open?+

October 2026. Founding-list members hear first; founding pricing holds for 72 hours from the open. Five configurations at launch: the Standard timeframe, the Heritage timeframe (five generations on one print), the Family timeframe (two or three lives on one print), the Companion timeframe (a human lifetime and an animal’s lifetime, to scale), and the Perennial timeframe (a longer arc for those who plan beyond the round century).

When the timeframe opens, the founding list hears first.

A slow, occasional dispatch about time, weeks, and what the timeframe is for. No daily emails. Unsubscribe any time.