You spent months planning the perfect wedding. Your photographer will deliver the official gallery in six to twelve weeks — but your guests captured hundreds of candid moments, toasts, and dance-floor photos on their phones. Without a photo-sharing QReamer on your table cards, most of those photos vanish into private camera rolls and you'll never see them.
Create a QReamer in under two minutes. Print it on your table cards. Guests scan, upload, and your shared album fills up in real time — during the reception.
Where to Send Your Photo-Sharing QReamer
Choose a platform that allows guest uploads without requiring them to create an account (that friction kills participation):
Google Photos shared album — create a shared album, enable "anyone with the link can add photos," copy the link. Guests tap, upload directly from their camera roll. Free, no app required.
iCloud Shared Album — works seamlessly for Apple-only weddings. Guests need iOS, but upload quality is excellent.
Dropbox shared folder — guests upload via browser, no account needed. Works across all devices. Good for couples who want originals in full resolution.
Zola / The Knot photo sharing — if you're already using one of these platforms for your wedding website, they often include a built-in photo sharing feature guests can reach directly.
Frame.io or Pic-Time — if your photographer is using a delivery platform that allows guest uploads, link there to consolidate everything in one place.
How to Create Your Wedding Photo-Sharing QReamer
Takes under two minutes — no account needed:
- Open QReamer.com in your browser.
- Click the URL tab (selected by default).
- Paste your shared album link — Google Photos, Dropbox, or your wedding platform's photo upload URL.
- Customize your QReamer: match your wedding palette, add a frame with "Scan to share your photos" or "Upload your photos here." A branded QReamer on a table card signals that this is intentional — and gets scanned.
- Click Download — SVG for print, PNG for digital use. Free, no watermark.
Your QReamer is dynamic — if you switch photo platforms before the wedding (it happens), you can update the destination URL from your dashboard without reprinting your table cards.
Placement Tips for Photo-Sharing QReamers
Table cards / place cards — one per table, front and center. The best placement for scan rate: put it somewhere guests look while waiting for the next course.
Cocktail hour signage — a 5×7 card at the bar or appetizer station. Cocktail hour is peak candid-photo time; capture the motivation in the moment.
Welcome sign at the entrance — catches guests before they're seated. Add a line like "Snap photos all night and share them here."
Photo booth props table — if you have a DIY photo booth, place the QReamer card right next to the props. People are already in photo mode.
Thank-you card follow-up — include the QReamer (or a shortened URL) in your thank-you cards with "Still have photos from our wedding? Add them here!" — catches late uploaders weeks after the event.
Minimum print size: 2.5 cm × 2.5 cm for table cards. Use SVG for crisply printed output at any size.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do guests need to install an app to upload photos?
Not if you link to Google Photos or Dropbox — both allow browser-based uploads without creating an account. Google Photos shared albums work directly from any phone's browser. This is why platform choice matters: you want zero friction between scan and upload.
Can I update the destination link after the table cards are printed?
Yes. Your QReamer is a dynamic code. If you switch from Google Photos to another platform, log into your QReamer dashboard and update the destination URL. The printed QReamer stays the same. No reprinting.
Will the QReamer expire during or after the wedding?
Never. QReamer redirect links do not expire. Your photo-sharing QReamer will still work when you're looking through photos on your first anniversary.
What format should I use when printing on table cards?
SVG — it's vector-based and scales perfectly to any print size without pixelation. Most print services (Canva, Moo, Zola stationery) can import SVG directly. If your printer requires raster, use PNG at 600 DPI.
How do I encourage guests to actually scan and upload?
Ask someone to make an announcement. Seriously — a 20-second mention from the MC at the start of dinner ("There's a QR code on every table — please share your photos with us!") dramatically increases participation. Combine it with a visible QReamer on each table and a short call-to-action printed next to it. The scan happens; the upload happens. The friction is behavioral, not technical.
QReamer