Frames is an iOS and macOS app for analog photographers who want to preserve more than just photos. It lets you log film stocks, exposure settings, and notes, then link them back to your scans. Your film archive becomes organized, enriched with metadata, and meaningful for the future of your photography.
Film photography is powerful because it captures not only subjects but also a personal story. Negatives and scans may last, but the context often fades. Frames was created to help analog photographers preserve more than the photo itself. It protects the notes, settings, and choices behind each roll so your work remains whole and not just a fragment of memory.
Every roll of film holds lessons, yet details are easily forgotten. Frames gives you a clear way to record film stock, exposure settings, camera bodies, lenses, and personal notes while shooting. Later, when you view your scans, that information can be reattached as metadata. This ensures each photo carries the story of how it was made, adding lasting context to your archive.
Preservation in photography means creating a system you can depend on. Frames organizes your rolls in a way that allows easy navigation, searching, and reflection even years later. By embedding notes and technical data back into your digital files, it transforms loose scans into a structured photo archive. For analog photographers, this means your film library evolves into a reliable record of both images and process.
Frames is not just an app for today but a companion built to last. It runs seamlessly on iPhone and Mac, ensuring your archive follows you wherever you work. Privacy is built in, with no sharing or selling of your data. The clean and focused design emphasizes clarity, making sure your notes and film records remain accessible without distraction. Over time, Frames becomes an extension of your creative process, preserving not only images but the craft that produced them.
Film photography is an art form with deep heritage, and Frames honors that by safeguarding the complete story of your photos. With every roll documented and connected to its scans, you are not just storing negatives, you are protecting the thoughts, conditions, and experiments that shaped them. For analog photographers who care about preservation, Frames is more than a tool. It is a way to ensure your film archive remains meaningful for the future, both for yourself and for others who may explore your work.
Vincent Tantardini