Time-Travel Through Old Photos With New Rewind Feature
Retro, a friend-focused photo sharing app, is adding a feature that feels nostalgic and intentional. The new tool, called Rewind, lets users time-travel through old photos stored on their phone’s camera roll. Unlike typical social feeds, Rewind is private by default. Users stay in control unless they choose to share a memory.
Retro already allows people to share weekly photo updates with close friends. The app also supports shared albums. Rewind builds on this idea by shifting attention inward, not outward.
Why Retro built the Rewind feature
Retro’s co-founder Nathan Sharp says the idea came from observing user behavior. The app already showed photos from the same week one year earlier. That feature performed well among long-time users. However, newer users missed out because they lacked enough uploaded photos.
Rewind fixes this gap by pulling memories directly from the camera roll. It gives every user access to time-based photo memories. Sharp believes people take more photos than ever but rarely revisit them. Rewind aims to change that habit.
How Rewind works inside the Retro app
Users can launch Rewind from the photo timeline or the middle navigation tab. Once opened, the app begins cycling through old photos. A soft haptic response adds a tactile feel while browsing memories.
An iPod-style dial lets users scroll backward or forward in time. Each movement triggers subtle vibrations. Users can pause, hide unwanted photos, or jump to a random memory using a dice icon. Sharing remains optional and intentional.
A quiet response to algorithm-heavy social media
Rewind also reflects Retro’s broader philosophy. The feature avoids AI-generated suggestions or “for you” feeds. Instead, it centers on personal history and real connections. Sharp says people will always want to see photos of friends, not strangers.
This approach stands out as social platforms grow more algorithm-driven. Retro continues positioning itself as a private, friend-first alternative.
Rollout details and what comes next
Rewind is rolling out in the U.S. and India. Retro currently has around one million users. Nearly half of them open the app daily. The company expects Rewind to deepen engagement without pushing notifications or public metrics.
For Retro, time travel is not about nostalgia alone. It is about giving meaning to the photos people already take.