An invitation

Before the are gone.

We text your family the questions. They tell the stories. Aunts, uncles, grandparents, siblings — all building one shared book together. By voice. No app to install. Nothing to learn.

Sunday lunch · '78
Phyllis, age 22
The kitchen we grew up in
"Tell me about your first job" "Your wedding day, what do you remember most" "Sunday dinners growing up" "A song that takes you back" "The day you became a parent" "A childhood friend you still think about" "Mum at the kitchen table" "The summer of 1979" "How you met" "Tell me about your first job" "Your wedding day, what do you remember most" "Sunday dinners growing up"

We always said we'd ask. Then someone got sick. Then someone moved. Then someone was gone, and the stories went with them.

One question, twice a week. A voice memo from your mum. A photograph from your aunt. A version of the same story from your uncle. Slowly, quietly, your family writes itself down.

How it works

The hard part isn't the recording.
It's remembering to ask.

So we do the asking. The questions arrive on a gentle cadence. You never have to think about what to ask next.

Add your family

Emails, phone numbers, who's who. We figure out who's a sibling, who's a parent, who's a grandparent.

We send them questions

Twice a week, by text or email. The link is the login — no app, no password.

They tell their stories

Voice, mostly. Skip anything you don't want. Add a photo at the end if you like.

It threads itself together

We transcribe, tag, and weave the answers into a shared archive your family can read and listen to.

What's different

Not for one person.
For all of you.

Most memory apps record one voice. We capture a family.

🏠

Group questions

The same wedding day gets asked of the bride, her son, and her sister. Three answers to one story.

🌳

Family tree that builds itself

We listen for the names. You sketch the tree. As stories stack up, the tree fills in.

Cross-validated by family

When Phyllis says her grandmother was called Edith, we ask her sister Margaret to confirm.

Privacy first

Your stories stay yours.

Private by design. No social features. No public profiles. Just your family.

End-to-end encrypted

Audio files, transcripts, and photos are encrypted at rest and in transit.

You control retention

Export or delete your entire archive anytime. No lock-in.

No AI training

Your family's stories are never used to train models. Period.

Ready to preserve your family's stories?

Start collecting memories today. No app to install, nothing to learn.

Get started → Contact us