stamp.

Inspired by paper scrapbooks. It allows users to save one photo of a detail they notice each day. The app does not have likes, feeds, or public sharing. It focuses on calm collecting instead of social media pressure.

Client

Concept project

Services

UX Research
User Interviews (lite)
User Flow Design
Wireframing
Hi-Fi UI Design
Prototyping
Usability Testing

Industries

Lifestyle / Photography

Date

2025

Problem

People often notice small, meaningful details in everyday life, but these moments rarely feel important enough to share on social media. At the same time, photo galleries quickly become chaotic and overloaded, making it hard to come back to anything meaningful.

Social apps also create pressure to curate and present content in a certain way. As a result, many small moments are simply forgotten instead of being kept.

People often notice small, meaningful details in everyday life, but these moments rarely feel important enough to share on social media. At the same time, photo galleries quickly become chaotic and overloaded, making it hard to come back to anything meaningful.

Social apps also create pressure to curate and present content in a certain way. As a result, many small moments are simply forgotten instead of being kept.

People want to remember
small things, but:

People want to remember
small things, but:

Katie (30yo) is someone who notices small, quiet moments during the day - light, textures, simple details.
She often takes photos, but they quickly get lost in her camera roll. It feels messy and easy to forget.
She doesn’t want to share everything. She just wants a simple way to keep one small moment a day, for herself.

Katie (30yo) is someone who notices small, quiet moments during the day - light, textures, simple details.
She often takes photos, but they quickly get lost in her camera roll. It feels messy and easy to forget.
She doesn’t want to share everything. She just wants a simple way to keep one small moment a day, for herself.

Idea is to create a private app for saving small moments.
Each photo becomes a small "stamp" - something you keep just for yourself.
Main rule:

Idea is to create a private app for saving small moments.
Each photo becomes a small "stamp" - something you keep just for yourself.
Main rule:

One stamp a day.

One stamp a day.

Key decisions

Decision
Why it matters
One stamp per dayCreates calm daily habit and limits overthinking
No deletingKeeps memories honest and reduces pressure to curate
No social featuresRemoves comparison and keeps the experience private
Simple editingKeeps the flow quick and focused on the moment
Physical feelingMakes the app feel personal like a scrapbook

The flow is simple

Testing

Quick test on lo-fi prototype showed:

- users tried to tap instead of swipe during editing
- some elements looked swipeable but weren’t (pages)
- users often skipped adding a note

👉 interactions should be clearer and simpler

Quick test on lo-fi prototype showed:

- users tried to tap instead of swipe during editing
- some elements looked swipeable but weren’t (pages)
- users often skipped adding a note

👉 interactions should be clearer and simpler

Final design

The final design focuses on a soft, paper-like background, a simple layout, minimal controls, and a strong focus on the stamp itself. The overall feeling is calm, personal, and slow, creating a quiet space for collecting everyday moments.

The final design focuses on a soft, paper-like background, a simple layout, minimal controls, and a strong focus on the stamp itself. The overall feeling is calm, personal, and slow, creating a quiet space for collecting everyday moments.

What's next?

stamp. could grow beyond a digital product.

The idea can extend into physical objects, like printing selected pages as real postcards or framed prints.

Users could turn their digital stamps into something they can hold or display at home.

Another direction is expanding the collection system, for example creating themed albums or time-based collections.


The goal would still stay the same — keeping the experience simple, calm, and personal.

stamp. could grow beyond a digital product.

The idea can extend into physical objects, like printing selected pages as real postcards or framed prints.

Users could turn their digital stamps into something they can hold or display at home.

Another direction is expanding the collection system, for example creating themed albums or time-based collections.


The goal would still stay the same — keeping the experience simple, calm, and personal.

Let’s stay in touch 👋
Feel free to reach out anytime!


agata.muszarska@gmail.com

Let’s stay in touch 👋
Feel free to reach out anytime!


agata.muszarska@gmail.com

Let’s stay in touch 👋
Feel free to reach out anytime!


agata.muszarska@gmail.com

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