About Abhinc
Twenty years in interior architecture. Countless spaces designed, modeled, and brought to life digitally.
In early 2025, the same process found a different scale. A digital model, a printer, a physical object in hand. What began as curiosity became an obsession with material, form, and the quiet craft of making things well.
Abhinc takes its name from the Latin word meaning both "since ago" and "henceforth." Past and future held in the same word. That tension is the point: foundational principles, applied forward, expressed through everyday objects that earn their place in a space.

The RIB System
The RIB collection didn't begin with a product. It began with a system — a set of constraints that shaped every decision that followed. Modular by design. Considered in proportion. Built so that each piece works alone, and works better alongside others.
The philosophy is simple: the system matters more than any single piece. Restraint is not a limitation — it is the discipline that makes good design possible. Every element that remains has earned its place. Everything else has been removed.
The four colorways are named after what they feel like, not what they look like. Natural textures. Quiet references. The kind of detail that rewards attention.
Made in Singapore, in Small Batches
Each piece is made in small batches in Singapore. Not for scarcity — for quality. Small batches mean closer attention, better material control, and the ability to refine with each run. It is the same logic that drives the design: do fewer things, and do them properly.
Studio Notes
The thinking behind Abhinc is documented in Studio Notes — a running record of the ideas, references, and decisions that shape the work.
- Four Colorways. — On naming the RIB collection after natural textures.
- Minimal as Discipline. Not as Aesthetic. — On the philosophy behind the RIB system.
- The System Matters More Than Any Single Piece. — On modular design thinking.
- The Confidence to Remove. — On Dieter Rams' influence and the design process.
- The Constraint Was the Brief — On how constraints shape the design.