800 Photos. 120 Picks. Zero Tedium.
You just shot a 12-hour wedding. You've culled to 800 keepers. Now you need 120 for the album, and the photo grid makes picking them actually fun.
These docs are still being written. Join the waitlist and we'll let you know when everything's ready.
Choosing Photos Shouldn't Be the Hard Part
You've got 800 photos from a wedding. You need 120 for the album. The old way? Scrolling through tiny thumbnails one by one, squinting, clicking, losing your place, scrolling again. Nobody's idea of a good time.
The photo grid changes everything.
Select Like You Mean It
- Lasso selection. Click and drag to grab a group of photos in one sweep. Like drawing a circle around "all the first dance shots."
- Shift+click range. Select from here to there, just like in Finder.
- Cmd+click toggle. Add or remove individual photos without losing your selection.
Select a bunch, drag them onto a spread, done. No fiddling with individual photos one at a time.
Scenes: Your Photos, Organized
After uploading, group your photos into scenes. Ceremony, portraits, reception, details. Whatever categories make sense for the shoot.
- Create a scene from any selection of photos
- Color-coded headers so you can tell scenes apart at a glance
- Drag photos between scenes to reorganize
- Collapse scenes you're not working with right now
When you're building spreads, scenes let you focus on just the photos you need. "Show me the ceremony shots" is one click, not a scroll marathon.
2,000 Photos, Zero Lag
The grid virtualizes everything, meaning it only renders what's on screen. Scroll through 2,000 photos as smoothly as 20. No lag, no jank, no "please wait" spinners. Just photos, fast.
Design Together Without the Email Ping-Pong
Your client, your second shooter, your studio partner. Everyone in the same album, at the same time. No more 'which photo is 47?'
Late-Night Editing Without the Headache
11 PM. Wedding album due tomorrow. Your screen is blinding you. We've all been there. Dark mode is here, and we cleaned up the whole interface while we were at it.