A shared photo album for the trip
Whoever you're traveling with — friends, family, a group house for the week — WholeStory builds a single album of the whole trip while it's still happening.
Everyone takes a phone. Everyone takes photos.
On a trip, people split off. Different boats. Different hikes. Different sides of the dinner table. By the end of the week, you've each got a camera roll full of your own version of the same vacation — and you'll never see the other versions unless someone goes through the trouble of sharing them.
One album, growing in real time
WholeStory's shared album updates as people upload. The morning surfer crew's photos show up while the late risers are still at breakfast. The kids' day at the pool is in the album by the time the adults get back from town. You see the whole trip — including the parts you weren't at — while it's still fresh.
For the group house dynamic
Group chats are great for plans, terrible for photos. They scroll past too fast and a week later nobody can find anything. WholeStory keeps the photos in one organized place separate from the "what's everyone doing for dinner" chatter. The chat stays useful. The album stays browseable.
The "send me the photos" problem, solved
No more group-text negotiations about which AirDrop link is which, no half-finished shared albums in some app three people don't have. By the time you're on the flight home, the trip's photos are already there — and you can download the whole album whenever you want a reminder of the week.