For serious hobbyists

Love the craft. Learn it like you mean it.

Espresso, woodworking, music theory, chess — turn the guides and videos you've collected into a self-paced course where progress feels like play and mastery is visible.

Sound familiar?

Tutorial roulette

Every video assumes a different starting point. You're intermediate at six things and confident at none.

No sense of getting better

Hobbies reward practice, but without structure you can't see the curve you're climbing.

Theory that never becomes intuition

Extraction ratios, voice leading, joint geometry — some things need to be played with, not just read.

Built for exactly this

Simulations you can fiddle with

Move the grind size, the tempo, the angle — interactive models turn theory into intuition.

A learning map of the craft

Watch the concept graph light up as you progress. The path from beginner to fluent, visible.

Self-paced, guilt-free

No due dates unless you want them. The course waits; your streak and XP celebrate showing up.

Practice modes between sessions

Flashcards and recall drills keep the knowledge warm between weekend sessions.

A certificate trophy

Finish the course, frame the certificate. You earned the theory to go with the callouses.

Courses from fellow obsessives

The marketplace has courses published by people as deep in the craft as you want to be.

How it works

1

Gather your rabbit holes

The forum posts, the YouTube channels, the one great book — in they go.

2

Learn in order, for once

A sequence that builds, with quizzes that confirm each level before the next.

3

Watch mastery accumulate

XP, streaks, the map filling in — and a certificate when the craft is yours.

Questions, answered

Is this overkill for a hobby?+

It's the opposite of overkill — it's respect. You already spend the hours; structure just makes them compound. And self-paced mode means zero deadline guilt.

What kinds of hobbies work?+

Anything with theory to learn: coffee, woodworking, music, chess, photography, fermentation, gardening, languages, electronics. If you can collect material about it, you can build a course on it.

Do I need to buy anything to try it?+

No — the free tier includes course generation, so your first craft course costs nothing.

Learnidex

The craft deserves a curriculum.

Build a course on the thing you love — free to start.