Calm and Creative Desk Setup in Canada

👋
You are reading Maker Stations — your Sunday newsletter, where we feature desk tours with makers and creators.

Name: JuSong B.

Location: Canada

Occupation: Product Designer

Room size: 18 m² (194 ft²)

Cost of setup: ~5-6,5K CAD ($3,4-$4,5K)

Social media: Instagram, TikTok, X, Bluesky

Hello! Tell us a bit about yourself

Hi! My name is JuSong. I was born in South Korea, grew up in Mexico, and currently live in Canada.

I’ve always considered myself someone who’s creative and loves to express themselves through learning, creating, and sharing their interests in this fast-paced technological era.

I’ve been a Product Designer for almost three years, focusing on designing both the user experience and user interface for websites and applications at my company.

I’ve always been drawn to trying things I like, so naturally, I leaned towards my interests.

As an avid fan of technology, I studied Computer Science and learned the fundamentals of software engineering and programming.

However, even though I finished my degree and was on track to get a software engineering job, I realised that spending five hours trying to centre a button was certainly not my calling.

Things took a turn when I took an Introduction to Human-Computer Interaction course.

I realised there was a path where I could focus entirely on the design aspect while still applying my Computer Science background.

Having received offers to be either a software engineer or a product designer, I decided to follow my gut and pursue design — and I haven’t looked back since!

Outside of being a product designer, I usually express myself and share my projects through different mediums, most recently music.

You could say I’m currently in my “music era” and have released two original songs (so far!) on various streaming platforms.

Depending on when this interview is released, my latest song Let It Snow — a fresh rendition of a classic holiday song — by me (JuSong) and Rein, will be available on all streaming platforms.

If you have Spotify, Apple Music, or YouTube and like indie music, feel free to give my songs a listen — I’d really appreciate it! :^)

(You can search for “JuSong” on streaming platforms, and I should hopefully appear, lol.)

Take us through your setup

Item Model
Main monitor Samsung Odyssey G5
Vertical monitor Samsung 24″ FHD 75Hz 5ms Monitor mount VIVO Dual Monitor Desk Mount
Laptop MacBook Pro M1 Pro 512GB Storage 16GB RAM
Speakers Edifier MR4
Headphones Sennheiser HD6XX
Keyboard GMMK Pro (white top frame)
Geekark BoW Keycaps with Accents
Gecko Silent Linear Switches
Mouse Logitech MX Anywhere 3
Desk mat Orbitkey Desk Mat
Mouse mat Razer Pro Glide
Chair Steelcase Leap V2
Desk Ergo Frame + IKEA KARLBY
Foot rest ErgoFoam
Desk shelf ×2 IKEA ALEX
Laptop stand Vertical Desktop Holder
Docking station Anker PowerExpand 5-in-1 Thunderbolt 4 Mini Dock
Hub switch USB 3.0 Switch Selector, ABLEWE KVM Switcher Adapter
Web camera Logitech C922x Pro Stream
Microphone Shure MV7
Yeti Nano
Microphone stand Blue Compass Premium Tube-Style Broadcast Boom Arm
Audio interface Focusrite Scarlett Solo
MIDI Keyboard Arturia MiniLab 3
Tablet iPad Pro M2
Phone stand Anker MagGo Wireless Charging Station (Foldable 3-in-1)

Custom PC

Motherboard MSI AMD B550M PRO-VDH WIFI
CPU AMD Ryzen 5 3600 6-Core GPU ASUS Arez Strix Radeon RX Vega64 8GB Power supply EVGA 600 B1 Bronze Storage Crucial P3 2TB PCIe Gen3 3D NAND NVMe M.2 SSD RAM Corsair Vengeance LPX 16GB (2×8GB) DDR4

I have a standing desk, currently made of an IKEA KARLBY tabletop, and an Ergo Frame.

I use both a PC and a MacBook, so whenever I need to switch between them, I use a docking station and a USB hub.

I rotate between sitting on my Steelcase Leap V2 office chair — with an ErgoFoam footrest not to keep my feet dangling — and standing up while I work.

Under my desk shelf, I keep my audio interface and keyboard handy for when I’m working on music.

I wanted to make my workspace as cosy as possible.

It definitely wasn’t before. I used to have just an IKEA desk someone gave away and a foldable chair.

During COVID, I realised I’d be working at my desk a lot more, so I slowly started gathering pieces to build the setup I have today.

My workspace evolution spanned five years and went through the following iterations:

30+ IKEA ALEX Desk Setup Hacks (Ideas From Real People)
Discover the best IKEA desk hacks, insights, and stories from creators and makers who used ALEX drawers in their workspaces.

What’s your favourite item on your desk?

I would probably say my mechanical keyboard.

It’s been a fun journey setting it up and accessorising the look and feel.

I fell deep into the mechanical keyboard rabbit hole, learning about different layouts, keycaps, switches, frames, and more.

It made me truly appreciate how much I rely on a keyboard.

Plus, there’s something incredibly gratifying about tuning and styling it to match my vibe — and changing it whenever I please.

How to Customise a Mechanical Keyboard
This step-by-step guide covers keycaps, switches, and layouts for the perfect typing experience.

I totally get why people end up building multiple keyboards, and I’ve been tempted… but I really can’t justify building another one when this one is already perfectly functional and great!

What apps or tools do you use to get things done?

Need to design? Figma.

Wow, I just love Figma so much.

I use it whenever I’m working on prototypes and wireframes, creating a mood board for my creative projects, or quickly making a vector logo or icon.

Need to draw, design thumbnails, or create logos? Procreate on my iPad feels like magic. With the Apple Pencil, it makes my life so much easier.

It feels incredibly natural and does everything I need.

Video editing? Final Cut Pro has me covered. I haven’t felt the need for anything more.

What about music? Logic Pro to the rescue. Still overwhelming compared to GarageBand, but powerful and surprisingly accessible!

What I really love about these tools is how seamless and intuitive my workflow feels.

The Apple ecosystem — as much as I get the dangers of relying on one company — man, they do such a good job with it.

And the best part? They’re all either a one-time purchase or free — a blessing in a subscription-infested world. (Looking at you, Adobe.)