Maya
· MESSAGE ·
Your science presentation was brave.
You kept going when the slides froze.
— Dad

























Attagram prints the morning plan, chore list, countdown, joke, and note from someone they love right where kids already look: the kitchen counter.
All on PHENOL-FREE paper.
A little paper strip with the stuff parents repeat out loud: what to pack, what to do next, what is coming up, and who is thinking about them.

Maya
· MESSAGE ·
Your science presentation was brave.
You kept going when the slides froze.
— Dad
Leo
· TODO ·
Night routine checklist
PJs, teeth, backpack by the door.
— Mom
Ava
· CHORE ·
Unload the dishwasher before screens
— Dad
Sam
· DONT FORGET ·
12 days until Spain
Practice one new phrase tonight.
— Mom
Zoe
· MESSAGE ·
Good luck at tryouts
Grandma is cheering from Ohio.
— Grandma
Noah
· CHORE ·
Take recycling out before dinner
— Mom
The point is not another productivity system. It is the breakfast-table moment when a kid sees their name, tears off the note, and feels like the plan belongs to them.
“It has my name on it.”
— Eva, age 8
“Can I put it in my room?”
— Hunter, age 10
“Both kids asked if a new Attagram was coming tomorrow. That was the moment it stopped feeling like a gadget and started feeling like a family ritual.”
— Brent, dad of two boys
Notifications don’t.
Make a routine checklist, chore, travel countdown, math problem, or message from family.
It appears on the kitchen counter as a little strip of paper.
They tear it off, carry it, check it off, or stick it on the fridge.
The morning routine. The chore list. The note from Grandma. The countdown to the trip.
“The before-school plan finally lives somewhere my kid can own.”
— Beta parent, kids 4 and 7
“Half fun, half practical communication. That is exactly what our house needs.”
— Beta parent, kids 5, 8, and 11
“My kids love getting notes from people who are not close by.”
— Beta parent, kids 3 and 9
“Brush teeth. Pack lunch. Shoes on.”
A visible start for kids who do not have a device.
“Hoodie morning. Practice at 4.”
What to wear, where they are going, and who is picking up.
“Unload dishwasher before screens.”
The little repeated things, made visible.
“Grandma says good luck today.”
The fridge note, from anywhere.
“Math problem of the day.”
A tiny prompt for curiosity.
“12 days until Disney.”
Trips, birthdays, visits, and big days made tangible.
Routines. Notes. Reminders.
Tiny wins.
All adding up.
The little things
make a big difference.
Reserve one before broader retail availability opens. Every box starts with phenol-free paper, no BPA or BPS.
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