Sindre — The Craftsman 

Learned to fix what others threw away.

 Sindre — The Hands that build independence.

I Norse mythology, Sindre (also spelled Sindri) is remembered as the master smith: the one who created what even the gods could not.

Mjølnir. Gungnir. Gullinbursti. Draupnir.

Not because he was loud — but because his hands understood what strength must feel like.

Where others improvised, Sindre refined.
Where others rushed, Sindre perfected.

In Handimovers, Sindre represents craftsmanship, simplicity, and tools that can be repaired anywhere.

He is the guardian of practical solutions — the ones that work in mud, in rain, in real life.
He is not the one with the greatest words, but the one whose work speaks for him.

Notable associations (Rooted in the Norse stories)

  • Master smith — Creator of the gods’ tools
    Symbol of precision, durability, and function over form.

  • Dvergar — The dwarven craftsmen
    Known for engineering brilliance, solving problems others considered impossible.

  • Mjølnir’s maker — Reliability under pressure
    A reminder that good design must survive rough handling and still perform.

  • Draupnir — The ring of renewal
    A symbol of consistent quality, reproducibility, and designs that never fail the user.

                                 ──────── ᛟᛗᛟ ──────── 

Why Sindre represents Handimovers

Because independence is built on things that last.

Because mobility equipment must not depend on specialists far away.
Because if something breaks in a forest, on a farm road, or in a Ukrainian village,it must be possible to fix with the tools at hand.

Sindre embodies this:

  • the engineer who thinks of the user first

  • the builder who removes the unnecessary

  • the simplicity that survives the world

  • the design that repairs instead of replaces

We chose Sindre as The Maker because Handimovers is not luxury — it is usable engineering, born from real terrain and real lives.

In our story, Sindre is the quiet strength behind everything that works.