Founder Index

Jaan Din Malik

Kreativio

Where Prompts Become Products

Physical creation should be as immediate as thought. We're building the layer that makes it possible.

THE 23-YEAR-OLD BUILDING THE INFRASTRUCTURE FOR AI-POWERED MANUFACTURING

Jaan Din Malik is twenty-three, but Kreativio already carries the discipline of a company built for a much longer horizon. At its core is a conviction that physical creation should be as accessible as digital creation — that the gap between imagination and a finished object is not a law of nature, but a missing layer of infrastructure.

The story did not begin as a venture-scale thesis. It began as MoonKnight Corner, a small 3D printing shop where Malik learned the operational realities of fulfillment, quality control, and customer expectations in the physical world. That experience shaped a pivot that many founders talk about but few execute cleanly: moving from selling individual items to building the system that lets anyone become a maker.

Kreativio's product vision centers on a workflow where a user types a prompt and the system generates a custom 3D-printable product, fulfilled through an affiliate network of print farms. The ambition is not merely personalization. It is to compress the distance between intent and object, using AI to translate language into manufacturable geometry while distributing production across a network that can scale without centralizing all complexity in one factory.

The company has been bootstrapped with $200K in family capital. Even at an early stage, the traction signals are unusually concrete for the category: a live beta with more than 450 waitlist users and more than $55K in revenue across more than 1,500 orders through storefronts on Shopify, Etsy, eBay, and TikTok Shop. Those numbers matter because they prove demand for the wedge — not just the vision.

Kreativio is a bet that physical creation will become as frictionless as digital creation, and that the winner will be whoever builds the rails: prompt-to-product workflows, trusted fulfillment partners, and the operational glue that makes the experience feel magical instead of fragile.