You spent lakhs making every detail perfect. The dress, the venue, the lights, the camera. Thousands of photos were taken. How many have you actually seen?
Every rupee you spent was a choice — a choice to make this day as beautiful as it could possibly be. Every item below was photographed, lit, and captured by a professional. It deserved to be seen.
Your photographer delivered a Google Drive link. Maybe a WhatsApp folder. You opened it once, scrolled for twenty minutes, liked fifty photos — and never went back.
That means up to 95% of your wedding photos have never been seen by you or your family. Not because they aren't beautiful — but because nobody made it easy to watch them.
The Mehendi morning. The quiet moment before the baraat arrived. Every aunt's expression when the couple entered. The décor details your family spent weeks choosing. All of it — sitting in a folder.
A printed album used to be the solution. But the world has changed — and the physical album has not kept up.
A physical album is a beautiful object — once. After the first few viewings it goes on a shelf, then into a box, then into storage. Most families can't even remember where it is.
A physical album holds 50 to 150 photos. Your photographer shot thousands. The rest — the unposed moments, the candids, the décor, the guests you didn't see all evening — are never printed.
Parents in another city? Family abroad? They can't see the album unless someone physically carries it to them. A printed album cannot travel.
Guests come over. Someone mentions the wedding. Someone should get the album. Nobody knows where it is. Someone goes looking. The moment passes. The album is not shown.
Printed photos yellow. Pages stick together. One flood, one leak, one careless moment — and decades of memories are gone. A physical album is one accident away from being lost.
Files in a folder are not an album. There is no order, no chapters, no names, no context. Scrolling through 10,000 unlabelled files on your phone is not reliving your wedding — it's work.
mAlbum turns your wedding photos into a living, organized, permanent experience — displayed on your smart TV, ready any time someone walks into the room.
Your relatives visit. Someone mentions the wedding. Instead of hunting for a photo album or opening a Drive link on a phone — you pick up the TV remote, open the URL, and within seconds the wedding is playing on the big screen.
After dinner, instead of scrolling social media, the family gathers around the TV and relives the wedding together. Every ceremony, every face, every moment that was captured. The album that plays while chai is served.
Parents in another city. Relatives abroad. They can open the same album on their smart TV and watch your wedding in full — organized, named, with ceremony chapters — as if they were sitting in your living room.
Your children will watch your wedding on the family TV. Your grandchildren will see every guest who attended, every detail of the venue, every ceremony chapter — not a handful of printed photos, but the whole story, organized and permanent.
Ceremony. Couple shots. Reception. Candid laughter. Venue details. Guest portraits. Every scene is organized into its own section. You don't scroll — you browse. And every single photo is there, not just the hundred that fit in a printed album.
300 guests attended your wedding. mAlbum groups every single one of them by face. Your TV shows every photo of each person who was there. Guests who came from far away, relatives you barely had time to speak to — their moments are all there.
Here is what makes mAlbum different from everything you've tried before.
Google Drive link. 10,000 unlabelled files. You scroll for twenty minutes, give up, and never go back.
Organized by ceremony, scene, and person. Every photo has a place. The album watches itself on your TV.
Physical album with 100 photos, sitting in a cupboard. You bring it out once a year — if you can find it.
All 10,000 photos. On your TV. Open it when guests arrive. Open it five years from now. It never expires.
Parents in another city see 50 photos on WhatsApp. They miss 95% of the wedding they travelled to attend.
One link. They open it on their own TV in their own city and watch the full wedding — every ceremony, every person, every moment.
Your guests received a few tagged photos. Most of them never saw a single photo of themselves from your wedding.
Every guest is grouped by face. Each person can find all their photos. Your 300 guests each get their own gallery.
You spent lakhs on one of the most important days of your life. The memories from that day should be easy to watch, easy to share, and permanent. Not buried in a Google Drive.