Your 2014 photos are still in your pocket. When did you last see one?
2014 was the year everything moved to the cloud and out of sight. Somewhere in your library sit hundreds of photos from it — auto-backup arrived and the shoebox quietly died — and the honest odds are you haven't opened that folder in years. That's not neglect; it's friction. Friction is fixable.
Why 2014 disappeared
Photos don't fade anymore — they sink. Every year of new pictures buries the last, and 2014 now lives under years of sediment no scroll session will ever reach. The grid interface is honest storage and terrible remembering: it shows everything and surfaces nothing. A 2014 photo has roughly zero chance of being seen again by accident, which is the only way most photos were ever seen at all.
Resurfacing 2014, the low-effort way
Bubbles In Time flips the mechanic: instead of you excavating 2014, 2014 floats to you. Pull a handful of favorites from 2014 into the app — the trip, the birthday, the people — and they join the rotation of memory bubbles that drift across your screen during ordinary phone use. Set the frequency, add a Mystery Photo for surprise, and a random Tuesday gains a visit from 2014 without you managing anything.
The 2014-sized payoff
The photos most worth resurfacing are exactly the ones old enough to surprise you — and 2014 is deep in that territory now. Faces have changed, places have changed, some people are gone; that's precisely what makes a thirty-second visit from 2014 land like a small gift instead of a chore. One $2.99 app, no subscription, no uploads, and 2014 stops being sediment.
Quick answers
How do I find my 2014 photos to add?
Your gallery's timeline or search can jump to 2014; pick favorites from there and add them as bubbles in Bubbles In Time.
Do old photos get uploaded anywhere?
No. Bubbles In Time reads from your device and shares no data — your memories never leave your phone.
Can I mix 2014 with other years?
Yes — build a rotation across any years you like, or let Mystery Photo surprise you.