Batch 02 / nocturne finish now calibrating

Read the near sky.

Morrow is a domestic atmosphere observatory: a quiet object that turns pressure, pollen, room climate, and light into one directive before the day gets noisy.

Morning stateNo feeds · no ads

06:42

Ventilate west rooms before the warm front arrives.

PressureFalling
Room21.4°
PollenLow
LightEast+

The premise

Weather should behave like architecture.

Built for entry tables, studios, plant shelves, kitchens, and rooms where the outside world is always negotiating with the inside one.

Not another glowing rectangle. A spatial instrument that edits the atmosphere into a single humane command: open, wait, shade, carry, breathe.

Signal matrix

Four inputs. One morning vector.

Morrow cross-checks hyperlocal forecast data with the condition of your actual room, then surfaces the smallest useful decision.

01

Sky pressure

Headache weather, named before it arrives.

Fast pressure swings, humidity drift, and incoming warmth become a plain-language warning instead of a graph you have to decode.

02

Indoor delta

Your window becomes an instrument.

Morrow compares outside air against indoor comfort and tells you when to open, close, shade, mist, or leave the room alone.

03

Biological load

Pollen without panic.

Allergy risk is translated into timing: walk now, rinse later, keep the bedroom sealed tonight.

04

Light rhythm

Plants get a quieter forecast.

Light and humidity cues for herbs, orchids, seedlings, and dramatic ferns.

The ritual

An instrument that knows when to disappear.

01

It calibrates before you wake.

At dawn, Morrow samples the room and updates the local atmospheric model without opening a notification feed.

02

It compresses the weather.

You receive one directive, three visible evidence points, and none of the performative anxiety of a weather app.

03

It dims after the decision.

Once the morning window has passed, the lens falls back to a low ambient pulse so your home does not become a command center.

Field note / ceramicist in Hull

“It made the room feel less like a place with screens and more like a place with weather.”

Reserve batch 02

A limited run for rooms that listen.

The first public nocturne run is limited to 600 numbered instruments in smoked glass, anodized graphite, and soft-touch mineral resin. Core forecasts work without a subscription.

Yes. Setup uses a phone once; after that Morrow can deliver its daily briefing directly on the instrument.

No. Room readings stay local by default. Weather requests use an approximate area, not a household behavior profile.

The physical object uses slow light changes only, and this page fully honors reduced-motion settings.