Tracking dietary restrictions & allergies
Allergies that travel with the kid, not the spreadsheet.
Set it once. Show up everywhere — snack signups, sleepovers, birthday cake plans. Room parents stop chasing.
Woven is the address book for your real-life village — carpools, classmates, soccer parents, the people you actually see.
Your kid’s class is coordinated across four group texts, two Google Sheets, a Sign-Up Genius nobody can find, and an email chain that moved to a different email chain. Birthdays slip. Allergies get forgotten. The room parent is doing unpaid project management on her phone at 10:47pm. Woven is the boring, useful tool that should have existed already.
Allergies that travel with the kid, not the spreadsheet.
Set it once. Show up everywhere — snack signups, sleepovers, birthday cake plans. Room parents stop chasing.
RSVPs that actually arrive.
Invite the parents you already know are in your kid's class. No app download required to RSVP.
Woven isn’t a social network. There’s no algorithm choosing what you see, no follower count, no “parents you may know” rabbit hole. Just the families whose kids your kids actually see — and the working layer that helps you all show up.
We’re starting in Minneapolis–Saint Paul. Tell us where your kid goes to school — we’re rolling out school by school.
Woven is a private space for the parents whose kids your kids actually see — classmates, teammates, neighbors, carpool families. Not a social network. Not a school administrative tool. A working layer for the logistics of family life.
Woven is built for parents, not advertisers. We don’t sell your data, we don’t run ads against your kid’s birthday party, and only the families you invite can see your plans.
Read our privacy approach →I’m a parent in the Twin Cities with kids in elementary school. I built Woven because my family was running our weeks out of seven different apps and a shared Google Sheet, and I’d had enough. Woven is the tool I wanted: small, private, focused on the actual logistics of school-community life. If that sounds like something your village could use, I’d love to have you in the early group.
— Ale Oyarzabal, Minneapolis