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Preserve Traditional Craft Heritage Through AI-Powered Storytelling

Create comprehensive cultural documentation, visual codex documents, and interactive experiences that honor artisan traditions and engage cultural tourism audiences

Start Documenting Your Craft Heritage

Early Access Code: buildworlds2026

Steps to Success

1

Create entities for master artisans, traditional techniques, cultural objects, and craft concepts in your heritage documentation

2

Develop canon entries about craft traditions, methods, and cultural significance, organizing them into story arcs that trace evolution across timeline periods

3

Generate codex documents filtered by timeline to create comprehensive heritage guides, and use image generation to visualize traditional techniques

4

Build interactive Discord experiences or create heritage comics that engage cultural tourism audiences with your craft traditions

Suggested Style Prompt

Use this prompt in Sojen to achieve the perfect style for your creation:

Apply a documentary photography aesthetic with warm natural lighting, rich textures highlighting traditional materials, and authentic cultural details that honor artisan craftsmanship and heritage

Style Examples

How It Works

SOJEN helps you document and preserve traditional craft heritage through a powerful world-building platform. Create entities for master artisans, craft techniques, and cultural objects. Develop canon entries that capture the stories, methods, and cultural significance of traditional crafts. Organize your heritage knowledge into story arcs that trace the evolution of craft traditions across generations. Generate comprehensive codex documents filtered by timeline periods to showcase different eras of craft development. Use image generation to create visual representations of traditional techniques and finished works. Build interactive Discord experiences where visitors can engage with craft heritage through character conversations and story contributions. Transform your cultural documentation into engaging comics that bring craft traditions to life for tourism audiences.

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Docs|Discord|© 2026 SOJEN

SOJEN is a story management platform that lets you create everything from comic books to character sheets and short stories. Use all of our features to unlock your creative super powers!

Features

Brainstorm Ideas

Brainstorm Ideas

Your AI assistant will help you brainstorm a single character or an entire world.

Create Characters Locations & Items

Create Characters Locations & Items

Upload or generate images, create backgrounds, assign timelines & traits.

Manage Connections

Manage Connections

Keep a graph of how your world components connect.

Create Canon

Create Canon

Story arcs and canon items, all mapped against story timelines.

Generate Media

Generate Media

Generate a short story or poem, a character sheet for an RPG or a podcast script. Always 'on canon'.

Character Chat

Character Chat

Chat with any character in your universe. Find out their feelings and viewpoint as your story evolves.

Comics

Comics

Our app library lets you generate full comic books with your characters in dozens of styles.

Discord

Discord

Use our Discord bot to let your community chat with characters.

Recent User Creations

A&P Grocery Store, Sudbury

A&P Grocery Store, Sudbury

The A&P Grocery Store in Sudbury, Ontario was one of the local outposts of the Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company — a chain that, by the mid-twentieth century, had become a fixture of working-class Canadian life. The Sudbury location stood in a city shaped by nickel mines and hard northern winters, where most families kept a careful eye on what they spent and counted on a reliable, no-frills grocer to stretch a paycheck. Inside, the store was a world of linoleum floors, fluorescent lights humming overhead, and shelves stacked with canned goods, flour, and cuts of meat wrapped in white butcher paper. The smell of fresh bread and cold storage hung in the air — practical, familiar, and honest. It was here that Watson Thompson worked after the war, trading the steel confines of a tank for the quieter rhythms of stock rooms and checkout counters. For a man who had commanded crews under fire in Europe, the work was unglamorous by any measure — but it was steady, and steady mattered when you had a family to keep. Watson moved through those aisles with the same deliberate efficiency he had carried into everything: methodical, unhurried, reliable. He knew the regulars, understood the routine, and brought to the simplest of jobs the same quiet dignity he carried out of the military. For the Thompson family, the A&P was more than an employer — it was the backbone of their postwar footing in Sudbury. Watson's years behind those counters helped build the household that Helen kept, and the life they made together in northern Ontario. In the way of so many working men of his generation, he left no great monument to that labour, only the evidence of it: a family fed, a home held, a life quietly but firmly built.

London, Ontario

London, Ontario

London, Ontario is a mid-sized city nestled in the heart of southwestern Ontario, situated along the forks of the Thames River roughly midway between Toronto and Windsor. Founded in the early nineteenth century and incorporated as a city in 1855, it was deliberately named after its English namesake — even its river shares the name Thames — a reflection of the loyalist and British colonial spirit that shaped much of Upper Canada. Surrounded by some of the most fertile agricultural land in the country, London grew steadily as a regional hub for commerce, education, and medicine, earning the informal title "Forest City" for the elm and oak canopies that once lined its streets. By the mid-twentieth century, London had matured into a self-contained city of modest but quiet confidence — home to Western University, a respected teaching hospital, and a manufacturing sector that kept working families employed through the postwar boom years. It was neither the frantic pace of Toronto nor the rural isolation of the smaller towns that dotted the surrounding countryside, but something in between: a place where a man could hold a steady job, raise a family in a brick house on a tree-lined street, and know his neighbours by name. The rhythm of life was dependable, shaped by shift work, church Sundays, and the particular pride of a community that built things and fed people. For families of Scottish and working-class stock who settled across southwestern Ontario, London represented both opportunity and rootedness. Its neighbourhoods carried the texture of immigrant ambition quietly fulfilled — corner grocers, legion halls, school yards, and kitchen tables where the real business of family life was conducted. It was a city that did not ask to be noticed, but simply got on with things, and in that sense it suited the people who called it home perfectly well.

Penage Cottage

Penage Cottage

Penage Cottage is the Thompson family's summer retreat, situated on the shores of Penage Lake in the rugged Canadian Shield country northwest of Sudbury, Ontario. Tucked among the granite outcroppings and stands of white birch and jack pine that define this part of Northern Ontario, the cottage offered a world apart from the rhythms of everyday life — a place where the smell of lake water and woodsmoke replaced the familiar textures of the city, and where time moved at the pace of the seasons rather than the working week. Each summer, the family converged on the cottage in full — children, grandchildren, and whoever else belonged to the extended Thompson orbit. It was the kind of place that earned its significance not through grandeur but through repetition and ritual: the same worn dock, the same view across the water at dusk, the same screen door that announced every arrival. Whatever distances had opened up during the year — geographic, generational, or otherwise — seemed to close a little at Penage. Meals stretched long, evenings were spent on the porch, and the lake offered both quiet mornings and the kind of easy, unstructured time that knits a family together without anyone quite noticing it happening. For the Thompsons, Penage Cottage was less a property than a shared inheritance — a place held in common memory as much as in deed. It stood as one of the few constants across the changing decades of family life, outlasting arguments and absences, accumulating stories with each passing summer. To have spent time there was to carry a piece of it forward, and those who did rarely spoke of it without a particular warmth in their voice.

Bella Lindenblit

Bella Lindenblit

My great grandmother living in the jewish quarter of Vilna, Poland, born about 1900. What would jewish life been likeas a young child. I haven't been able to find out anything about her parents except that her father's last name is Lindenblit and born about 1880's.

Get Started for Free

Get 100 story coins just for signing up. Use coins to generate story and world elements. Your first world is free for 30 days

Start Documenting Your Craft Heritage

Early Access Code: buildworlds2026

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