TripSmith
a studio for itineraries
How it works

Six small acts
of attention.

A TripSmith plan is not generated. It is composed — the way a friend with a long lunch and a stack of guidebooks would compose it for you. Below: each act, expanded, with the kind of detail that survives a re-reading at 6 AM.

~6 minutes · written for the curious traveler
i

We anchor your trip.

Before a single bus is checked or a coffee is chosen, we set the immovable moments — the ones the trip is shaped around. Sunrise at a torii, a high-tide ferry, the one omakase you've been dreaming of for a year, the conference Tuesday through Friday that you didn't come to skip. These get pinned first, with exact times, and everything else bends toward them.

Anchors are the difference between a trip that feels like yours and a trip that feels like a generated list. They are why we ask, before anything else, what you'd be sad to have missed.

Concrete On a recent Lisbon plan: the 19:45 fado set at Mesa de Frades (Friday, reserved 31 days out) was the first fixed point. The rest of Friday — a lazy Alfama afternoon, a 17:00 ginjinha at A Ginjinha, a 19:30 walk uphill — was composed backward from that 19:45, so nothing rushed and nothing was missed.
ii

We weave the day around them.

Once the anchors are pinned, hotels, meals, transit, and slow afternoons fall into place around them — placed with care, not slotted. Walking minutes that honor your stride. Train transfers that respect your luggage. Dinner before your stated cap, not at it. A coffee that buys you time to read the museum's labels properly.

The route is walked on a map before it lands in your inbox; if a step turns out to be longer or duller than the line on the screen suggested, we re-route.

Concrete A 10:00 visit to the Jerónimos Monastery and an 11:45 reservation at Pastéis de Belém is not a four-minute taxi. It is a six-minute walk along the river, past the Padrão dos Descobrimentos at exactly the hour the cruise-ship crowd retreats inside for coffee — so the photograph is yours, and the queue at the pastéis counter has already begun to thin.
iii

We fill the gaps with small joys.

The hours between anchors are where most trips lose their character. A list-maker fills them with cafés and viewpoints; we try to fill them with the thing you'd remember a year later. A bookshop where the owner speaks four languages. A bench under a jacaranda. A small museum nobody mentioned. The kissaten that opens before the temple does.

And — just as importantly — we remove. If three coffee shops fall within a kilometer, we keep the one with the best window and let you discover the other two yourself.

Concrete A morning in Lisbon's Príncipe Real had Hello, Kristof, Copenhagen Coffee Lab, and Fábrica Coffee Roasters inside a 600-meter radius. We kept Hello, Kristof — small, well-lit, magazines on the counter — and gave you the 22-minute gap between coffee and the Embaixada concept-store opening at 11:00 as deliberately unscheduled. You'll fill it. That's the point.
iv

We compose the first draft.

A complete itinerary lands — already routed, already tagged with bookings, weather, prayer windows, dietary flags, accessibility. Every venue is real: verified address, today's opening hours, today's rating, a booking link, a phone that answers, a last-checked-on date you can see in the footer. The bus numbers we couldn't verify are struck and replaced with the metro line we could.

This draft is good. It is also not yet shown to you. There is still one more pass.

Concrete Draft v1 for a Lisbon Tuesday routed a tram-28 connection from Estrela to Graça. The schedule looked clean on paper — until we noticed the 14:10 departure had been suspended for track work through May 24. We swapped it for the 712 bus from Calçada da Estrela, added six minutes to the leg, and noted the change in the day's colophon so you'd know why.
v

We read it again, quietly.

A close re-reading, before you see anything. Walking times sanity-checked against the map a second time. Cross-contamination in halal kitchens. Opening hours, lottery deadlines, prayer-time conflicts. Whether the museum we picked is closed on Mondays. Whether the rooftop bar's "open until 2 AM" survives a Tuesday in winter. Small things, attended to.

We read it in the same light you'll read it in — first thing in the morning, before the writer of the day before is consulted.

A spice stall in the Marrakech souk, mounds of pigment in copper bowls.
Marrakech, second pour of tea. On the re-read we caught the 18:45 dinner at Nomad overlapped Maghrib by eleven minutes — moved to 19:30.
Concrete On the re-read of a Marrakech plan, we caught that the 18:45 dinner at Nomad overlapped with Maghrib by eleven minutes that week. We moved it to 19:30 — a small thing, and exactly the kind of small thing a friend would have caught on the second pour of tea.
vi

We polish before you see it.

Anything the re-reading caught is fixed before the plan reaches you. A short letter, in your language, explains the choices we made for you — like a friend handing you the plan with a smile, telling you why the second day starts at the market and not the museum. The colophon at the foot of the trip names what was checked, on what date, with what sources, so the work is visible and not just the result.

Then, and only then, the email lands. One tap and you're in. No password. No card. No regenerate button.

Concrete The cover letter for a Lisbon plan opened: "We started your Friday in Alfama because you said you sleep best near water, and the morning light there is the reason people first stayed." Three sentences. They explained more than a feature list ever could.

What you actually get back.

A specimen Day 2 from a recent Lisbon plan. Venues are real. Walking minutes are honest. Numbers were checked the day the plan composed.

A yellow tram on a narrow Lisbon street with pastel facades and laundry above.
Alfama, Lisbon. The day below — sunrise coffee, west walls before the queue, fado after dark — walked on the map before it landed in the inbox.
Day 2 · 2026-04-18 · Lisbon

Alfama before the heat · fado after dark

07:40
Coffee — Dear Breakfast, Alfama

Opens at 8 but the door's unlocked from 7:40 if you knock. Eggs benedict, €9. The window seat looks down at the Sé.

breakfastquiet hour
09:00
São Jorge Castle — west walls first

Enter at 09:00 sharp; the west ramparts are empty for the first 25 minutes. €15 · skip the audio guide. Loop the peacock garden on the way out.

flagshipstep-careful
13:30
Lunch — Prado, Baixa

Natural wine, Portuguese small plates that change daily. ★ 4.6 · €38/person · they hold the courtyard table until 13:35 if you call ahead.

lunchreserved
19:45
Fado — Mesa de Frades

Forty seats in a tiled chapel. Music starts at 20:30 but the table opens at 19:45 for the menu of the day. €55 set + wine. Bring cash for the singers' hat.

anchormusic
— Day 2 of 6. Day 3 begins at the LX Factory because you said you collect independent bookshops.