About Us
The story behind Solvia
It took time — a lot of testing and a lot of rejection. Not just trying different products, but understanding why most of them failed in the first place. Weak suction that couldn’t properly remove air. Inconsistent sealing that made you question whether it even worked. Designs that felt convenient at first, but quickly became something you stopped using.
Until I finally found something that met every single requirement. Something simple, but reliable. Something that didn’t just work once, but worked every time. That’s what became Solvia™ FreshSeal.
I didn’t invent something new. I simply refused to accept what was already out there. Because the idea itself was never the problem — vacuum sealing works. The problem was how it was being executed. Most products were built to be “good enough,” not to actually solve the problem completely.
Every feature in Solvia exists for a reason. The strong suction is there because anything less simply doesn’t preserve food properly. The fast sealing is there because no one wants to deal with extra steps in their daily routine. And the compact design is there because if it’s not easy to reach and easy to use, it ends up sitting in a drawer — unused, like everything else that promised convenience but didn’t deliver.
Solvia started because I was a frustrated customer who couldn’t find what I needed — and that’s still what drives everything we do today. Not trends. Not competition. Just real problems that people deal with every day in their own kitchens. If it doesn’t solve a real problem, we don’t make it.
If you’ve been through the same cycle — buying food, storing it carefully, and still ending up throwing it away — I understand exactly how that feels. It’s not just about wasted food. It’s wasted time, wasted effort, and wasted money that adds up more than you realize.
I really do get it. I was in that same position, opening the fridge and thinking there had to be a better way to do this.
And that’s exactly why I built Solvia — to stop going through that cycle, and to create something that finally works the way it should.