Getting real-camera photos into the daily rotation
The best photographs most people own were taken on a real camera — and live on an SD card or a laptop, exiled from the phone where daily life happens.
Getting them into the rotation
Export favorites at phone-friendly size, transfer them over, add to Bubbles In Time. Your sharpest work finally competes with phone snapshots for daily attention. (Photographers: this is the layer your portfolio was missing.)
The general principle
Bubbles In Time floats anything that lives in your phone's photo library — so any photo you can get onto the device can join the rotation, regardless of where it was born. The app adds nothing to a cloud in the process: transfer once, curate the keepers, and the memories circulate on-device from then on.
Curation beats completeness
Whatever the source, resist importing everything. The rotation is a playlist, not a backup: pick the photos that stop you, add those, and leave the rest wherever they're archived. Twenty keepers from any source outperform two hundred maybes from all of them.
Quick answers
Can real-camera (DSLR/mirrorless) photos become floating memories?
Yes — anything in your phone's photo library can be added to the rotation, wherever it originally came from.
Do bubbles interrupt what I'm doing?
No — bubbles float without stealing focus. Tap to open a memory, dismiss to continue.
Does it work offline?
Completely — there's no server, so bubbles float with or without a connection.