One album per event, automatically curated
Most wedding photo apps give you a single, undifferentiated bucket — a thousand photos in one timeline, undated and unsortable. That's a poor fit for a multi-event South Asian wedding where the Mehndi, the Sangeet, the Anand Karaj, the Lunch, and the Reception each have their own story to tell. Baraat creates a separate album for each of your wedding events, and as guests upload, photos are automatically routed by their timestamp into the right event. The Mehndi album is full of marigold-and-mehndi shots. The Sangeet album is full of dance-floor moments. The Vivah album is full of mandap and saat-phere photos. Each event tells its own visual story, and the wedding as a whole feels coherently documented rather than chaotically dumped.
Every guest contributes from their phone — no app required
You don't want six hundred guests installing an app to upload three photos each. Baraat's upload flow works in a phone's browser, in five seconds, with no account creation. Print a small QR code on the table cards or the order of service; scan it; tap "upload"; pick from the camera roll; done. The photos go straight into the right event's album. Older guests find it easy. Younger guests find it instant. The professional photographer can also upload to the same album once they've delivered the high-resolution gallery — so the official photos and the candid family moments live side by side.
AI organisation: faces, moments, and the best shots
Once photos are flowing in, Baraat groups them automatically: by face (so all the photos of the bride's grandmother are one tap away), by moment (the saat phere group, the first dance group, the bidaai farewell group), and by quality (the AI surfaces a "highlights" view of the strongest shots from each event so you don't have to scroll through 400 nearly-identical mandap photos). You can rename face groups ("Auntie Sushila", "Cousin Raj"), merge groups when the AI mistakenly splits a person across two clusters, and share a face-filtered link with the family member it features — so Auntie Sushila gets her own private link to all 47 photos of her, no scrolling required.
Privacy that respects family, not just data
A wedding album is intimate. Some couples want a public album anyone with the link can see. Some want it locked to invited guests. Some want certain photos visible only to immediate family — for example, the choora ceremony or the bidaai farewell, which are emotionally private. Baraat supports all three modes. By default the album is private to your guest list (each guest accesses through their RSVP code or a dedicated album invite). Individual photos or whole events can be flagged as "family-only" and will only be visible to a sub-set you specify. There is no public indexing, no AI training, no third-party sharing — your wedding photos belong to you and the people you invited.
Download, print, and keep — forever
A shared album that lives only in the cloud is one accidental account deletion away from being gone. Baraat lets you bulk-download the entire album as a zip file at any time, with photos organised into per-event folders, named by date and time. From there, the same files can be handed to a photo book service to print a hardback wedding album, uploaded to a long-term backup, or simply kept on a hard drive in your loft for the next thirty years. Your album is a living thing during the wedding and a permanent record afterwards.
What's inside
Built to handle the full job.
One album per event
Mehndi, Sangeet, Vivah, Reception — automatically routed by photo timestamp.
Browser upload, no app needed
Guests scan a QR, tap upload — done in five seconds.
AI face and moment grouping
Photos auto-cluster by person, by moment, and by quality.
Per-person filtered links
Send Auntie Sushila a private link to all her own photos.
Granular privacy
Private to guest list, family-only flagging, no public indexing or AI training.
Bulk download
Entire album as a zip, organised per event — yours to keep, print, or back up.
In real weddings
How couples are using it.
Six hundred guests, four events, one album
Your wedding has 600 guests across Mehndi, Sangeet, Vivah, and Reception. Print 50 small QR codes scattered across the venue. By the end of the wedding, 2,400 photos are in the album, automatically routed into four event-specific galleries. The professional photographer adds another 1,200 the following month. You have a single, coherent record of the entire wedding — no WhatsApp scavenger hunt required.
Auntie-targeted private links
After the wedding, you generate a face-filtered link for every elder family member. Auntie Sushila gets her 47 photos. Uncle Raj gets his 32. Each gets a dedicated link they can save, share with their kids, and print from. The thank-you-after-the-wedding gestures handle themselves.
Family-only photos for the bidaai
The bidaai is emotional and private. You flag the bidaai photos as "family-only", visible only to immediate family. The wider guest list never sees them, and the moments stay where they belong.
Frequently asked