About Us

Two men sitting at a table in a modern office setting, engaged in conversation.
Qyvandra was created as a learning space for designers who want to study AI-based approaches in creative work with calm structure and practical guidance. Our team began this direction after facing a period of confusion ourselves: there were many materials available, but many of them did not explain how a designer could think in an organized way, write clear tasks, review visual variations, and keep a personal creative view. We saw that AI is often presented with loud wording, while designers need something more grounded: a clear learning system, practical exercises, and careful work with shape, color, composition, and idea development.

This is why the Qyvandra team created Free Kit. Its purpose is to offer a calm first step into AI for designers: from idea writing to a mini brief, from reference analysis to review of a visual direction. We wanted to create materials that do not overload the learner with heavy terminology, but explain the process in human language. Every module is built around an action: describe, compare, clarify, review, and write a learning note. This approach helps the learner avoid random variation and see study as a structured creative route.

MUNTIAN LIUDMYLA - Owner
The course author is Muntian Liudmyla, AI Design Learning Author and Visual Workflow Researcher. She has 5 years of experience in digital design, educational materials, and creative system building for designers. Her work focuses on connecting visual thinking, written descriptions, composition logic, and AI-based approaches inside learning courses. Before shaping Qyvandra, Liudmyla worked with independent design studios, small creative teams, educational projects, and visual content creators. We do not list third-party company names on this page, so the focus stays on Qyvandra learning materials.

In her previous work, Liudmyla created mood directions, learning briefs, concept maps, visual analysis exercises, and structures for independent study. She worked with designers who wanted to describe ideas more clearly, build composition, analyze color, compare variations, and write personal notes after practice. These observations became the foundation of Qyvandra: a course should not only show examples, but teach structured thinking.

Across her work, the author has prepared materials for 700 learners and creative specialists studying design thinking, AI-oriented tasks, composition exercises, and visual series. Her approach is not built around identical outcomes for everyone. Instead, it helps each learner work more carefully with personal ideas, descriptions, references, and revisions.

The mission of Qyvandra is to create courses that support calm, structured, and practical learning. We believe AI for designers should be studied through clear steps: idea, brief, visual language, composition, variations, review, and learning notes. Free Kit is the first step in this system. It helps the learner understand the basic principles and prepare for deeper Qyvandra courses, where AI design practice gradually moves into series, capsules, editorial maps, and broader creative systems.