Introduction
Most parents have thousands of baby photos stored on their phones β and no system to organize them. The result is photo overload and decision paralysis.
Organizing baby photos doesnβt need to be complicated. It just needs to be intentional.
Why Photo Overload Happens
Babies change rapidly. Parents take photos constantly. Without a system, everything piles up.
Why Traditional Folder Systems Fail

Folders require time, energy, and consistency. When life gets busy, organization falls apart.
A Simpler Approach to Organizing Baby Photos
Instead of folders, focus on:
- Timelines
- Meaningful selection
- Notes and context
The Power of a Weekly Habit
Once a week:
- Choose 1β3 meaningful photos
- Add a short note
- Let the rest go
This keeps your memories manageable.
Digital Timelines vs Physical Albums

Digital timelines grow with your child, are easy to maintain, and allow you to preserve both images and words together.
Letting Go of Perfection
You donβt need every photo. You need the ones that tell your story.
Stop losing your babyβs story in your camera roll.
With The Days We Keep, your baby photos become a meaningful timeline β not digital clutter.
β Choose what matters
β Add context with short notes
β Watch memories grow over time
Turn photos into a story worth keeping.
FAQS
Why is organizing baby photos so overwhelming?
Parents take many photos during the first years, and without a system, images pile up quickly.
Do I need folders to organize baby photos?
No. Timelines and selective saving are often more sustainable than folder systems.
How many baby photos should I save?
Focus on quality over quantity. Saving 1β3 meaningful photos per week is enough.
Whatβs the best way to keep baby photos long-term?
Digital timelines that combine photos with notes are easier to maintain and preserve emotional context.

