Send photos, not links.
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Send photos, not links.
Photo galleries for professionals who'd rather not explain why WeTransfer expired.
The shoot went well. The edit's done. Now comes the part nobody talks about: actually getting photos to the people who need them.
So you upload to Google Drive. Or Dropbox. Or WeTransfer if you're feeling fancy. You send a link. You hope they click it before it expires. You hope they don't reply asking "which folder?" You hope they don't screenshot the preview and call it good.
There's no shortage of ways to send files. But presenting work that actually matters is different.
Dropbox is for spreadsheets. Google Drive is for docs. WeTransfer is for "here's the ZIP, good luck." None of them care how your photos look when someone opens them.
Your client gets a folder. Thumbnails. A download button. The colors might be off because the preview isn't color-managed. They're viewing on their phone and the layout is chaos. They give up and ask you to email the favorites.
You spent hours on these images. The delivery takes two minutes and undoes half of it.
khro.me is a dedicated space for photos.
Upload a shoot. Get a link. When someone opens it, they see a gallery—clean, fast, full-screen. Not a folder. Not a file browser.
It loads fast everywhere. Colors stay accurate. Desktop and mobile look the same. They can browse, select, download without calling you to ask how.
Works for photographers delivering to clients. Works for creative teams reviewing a shoot internally. Works for anyone who needs photos to land the way they should.
Your gallery loads fast everywhere. The first thing your client sees isn't a loading spinner.
Your work looks right. Same infrastructure Netflix and Spotify use.
Email, SMS, or direct link. You can see who's opened what and when they've downloaded. No more wondering if the link worked.
Clients can mark selects directly in the gallery. No more "can you send me numbers 14, 27, and that one with the blue background."
khro.me started because we were sending Dropbox links and hating every minute of it. Every time a client asked "which folder?" we thought there has to be something better.
So we built it. Small team, no outside investors. Nobody telling us to add features we don't need or optimize for metrics that don't matter. Just focused on making photo delivery actually good.
We're not trying to replace your DAM or your editing software. We're the last step—the part where your work reaches people—and we want that part to stop being an afterthought.
We're rolling out to photographers and creative teams who care about this stuff.
No credit card. No commitment.