When a pet passes, what's left are scattered photos, a few short videos, maybe a voice note where you can hear them in the background. Fragments that get harder to find over time — right when you most want to see them.
Why a physical memorial helps
Having one concrete place to return to — a photo frame, a small shelf altar — helps process loss differently than just "having the photos saved somewhere." It gives the memory a space, instead of letting it float in a folder you avoid opening.
A way to keep their memory always accessible
- Choose the photos and videos that best represent who your pet was, not just the most recent ones.
- Put that selection behind a photo frame or magnet with an NFC tag — every tap brings the full album back.
- Share it with family: everyone can tap their own phone and relive the same memories, not just whoever had the photos saved.
It's not about replacing grief with technology — it's about giving their memory a fixed, easy-to-visit place instead of letting it get lost among thousands of unorganized photos.