Menus & boards
Readable type, sane contrast, and structure that matches how people scan: sections, prices, and the one thing you want them to try today.
Showcase sample · not a separate product lane
Menus, specials, hours, and “what’s on tap”—on the wall or behind the bar, running on gear you own, with workflows you can use during a rush. Month-at-a-glance, dinner plan, or a quiet photo loop on the TV you already own—same wall-display idea as our shop work, without turning the living room into an ad network.
For lightweight loops we like a small Pi running offline Wi‑Fi (open access point), a shared folder (Samba), and a rotating image player—phones on the couch can drop new JPGs without touching the public internet. Point the same box at a month-view HTML page or a school calendar instead of tap list specials, and you’re in “home mode” without a different stack.
Shop line, home line, or both—we scope for what people actually read from where they stand.
Readable type, sane contrast, and structure that matches how people scan: sections, prices, and the one thing you want them to try today.
Swap a slide when the keg kicks or the band starts. We set you up so updates don’t need a “web person” on speed dial.
Closing early, holiday hours, parking note—whatever cuts down the same three questions at the register.
At home the “promo” might be who’s picking up whom, a shared month view, or a rotating folder of art—same contrast and distance rules, calmer motion, no nagging signup boxes.
Cloud-friendly pages in full-screen mode, or a lightweight player—your call. We keep payment networks off the project and put customer-facing stuff on its own lane when we can.
Tell us your wall—shop floor, break room, or kitchen hallway—and we’ll sketch a sane first version.