Pick a trip.
postd scans your library and automatically groups your photos into trips. Pick one and start culling. No manual sorting, and your photos never leave your phone.
postd scans your camera roll and sorts it into trips for you, then turns the dread of clearing each one into a satisfying five-minute swipe. Keep, delete, favourite, one decision at a time. Export a grid-ready set when you're done.
No tutorials, no account, no learning curve. Open the app, pick a trip, start swiping. Your camera roll thanks you in about the time it takes to drink a flat white.
postd scans your library and automatically groups your photos into trips. Pick one and start culling. No manual sorting, and your photos never leave your phone.
Right to keep, left to delete, up to favourite. Spring-loaded, haptic-backed, undoable. The photo is the hero, not the chrome.
Your favourites land in a tidy album of their own, ready to post. Bulk-share, AirDrop, or save back to your Camera Roll.
Every photo gets one of three verdicts. Tilt threshold reveals the choice; release past about a third of the way commits (a quick flick works too). Tactile, spring-loaded, and reversible for five seconds.
Held for five seconds with instant undo, then on to the system Recently Deleted. Always reversible. Nothing is ever gone until you say so.
For the shots that will actually make the grid. Favourites get their own album, ready to share wherever you're posting.
Worth holding onto, but not for the feed. Kept photos stay safe in your camera roll. Untouched, unfiltered, unsynced.
Nothing world-changing here. Just every detail considered, so the app stays out of the way and lets the photos do the work.
Every swipe is reversible for five seconds, then heads to system Recently Deleted (where it lives for another 30 days). Trigger-happy? Mistakes? No problem.
postd auto-detects your holidays. It groups photos using the date and location your camera already saved with them, so each trip is ready to cull in one sitting. No manual sorting, and postd never asks for your device location.
Your photos never leave your iPhone. No upload, no cloud sync, no account, no telemetry on image content. (The one exception: turning a trip's location into a place name uses Apple's maps service; your photos and choices stay on device.)
A light tap at threshold, a satisfying medium thump on commit. Audio cues you can mute. It just feels right.
The most common ones. If you don't see yours, the answer is probably "yes, and we put a lot of thought into it."
When you swipe left, the photo moves to your iOS Recently Deleted album, the same place as if you'd deleted it in Photos.app. It sits there for 30 days before iOS purges it, and you can restore it from there any time. Right after the swipe, postd's own 5-second undo pulls it straight back.
Your photos never leave your phone, and we never see them. There's no account and no postd server. Everything you do (culling, favourites, the smart-roll grouping) runs locally using Apple's PhotoKit. The only thing that goes online is naming a trip's location: to show "Lisbon" instead of coordinates, postd asks Apple's maps service to turn the location into a place name. Your images and your swipes are never sent anywhere.
postd is a one-time £2.99 purchase on the App Store. No subscription, no in-app purchases, no ads. Pay once and every feature is yours, including future updates.
Any iPhone running iOS 15 or later. Optimised for iPhone 14 and above, with its newer Taptic Engine. postd is built for iPhone, so there's no iPad version yet.
Not yet. postd is photos-only for now, and videos are left untouched in your library. Live Photos show up as photos so you can cull them like any other shot. Video support is on the list.
Two safety nets. (1) The 5-second in-app undo right after the swipe. (2) The standard iOS Recently Deleted, where photos hang around for another 30 days. You'd have to try quite hard to actually lose a photo.
Not yet. We built postd around iOS's PhotoKit and Taptic Engine, and the gestures and haptics are 80% of why it feels right. We'll consider Android once we've nailed the iOS experience.
Download postd. Open it. Swipe. Be done before your coffee goes cold.