Capture one page at a time
Pick one photo, send one private prompt, and turn the answer into a digital story page. Repeat only after the first page feels worth keeping.
MemoryLane guide
A digital memory book should do more than store scanned photos. It should preserve the reason each photo matters, including the voice of the person who remembers the moment.
Pick one photo, send one private prompt, and turn the answer into a digital story page. Repeat only after the first page feels worth keeping.
MemoryLane keeps the original image, recording, transcript, and polished story in one place so the memory does not get scattered across messages and files.
A digital page is easy to send to family without forcing everyone into a new album app or public social feed.
Use the scan as the anchor, then add the remembered story, voice, and transcript beside it.
Let someone speak naturally first, then turn that answer into readable story text.
Send one private link to relatives instead of scattering the memory across texts and cloud folders.
Start with one meaningful photo, ask the person who remembers it what happened, then save their answer with the image as a digital story page.
Include the photo, names, place, date if known, the story behind the moment, and ideally the original voice recording.