Blog
Notes for hosts — what we're learning about the night you'll keep replaying.

Corporate holiday party themes that are actually worth photographing
How to pick a holiday party theme your team will want pictures of — and how to make sure those pictures end up in one place instead of scattered across forty phones.

Where to put your wedding QR code so guests actually scan it
A QR code only collects photos if people see it and understand what it's for. Seven places to put yours at a wedding, and how to make each one obvious.

Building your corporate event tech stack: the seven pieces that matter
A plain rundown of the tools a corporate event actually needs in 2026 — what each one is for, and where photo capture fits so the event doesn't vanish the moment it ends.

A memorial photo display that everyone can add to
How to build a photo tribute for a service or celebration of life — the physical display, and a quiet digital gallery where everyone who knew them can add the pictures only they have.

A digital memorial that lasts — and that distant family can be part of
Beyond the photos: how to collect written memories, include the people who can't travel, and keep a tribute somewhere the family can return to on the hard days.

Two minutes to set up a wedding photo gallery
What the host actually does between booking PixVenu and printing the QR code for the reception.

Digital wedding invitations and online RSVPs, on the same link as your photos
Send the invite, collect the replies, track who's coming and what they're eating — and have it all live on the same gallery that fills with photos after the day.

Disposable cameras or a digital gallery? An honest look for your wedding
Single-use cameras have real charm — and real limits. Here's how they actually compare to a photo gallery guests upload to, and why most couples end up doing a bit of both.

Why no-app QR sharing wins at receptions
Shared Dropbox folders, hashtags, and 'send me your photos' group texts all fail in the same predictable way. QR codes don't.

How to ask guests not to post your wedding online (and give them somewhere better)
A polite request only goes so far. The reliable way to keep your wedding off social media is to give guests a private place to share photos instead — here's how to do both.
