Launching today

PicSlicer
Turn travel photos into collectible ticket-style keepsakes.
8 followers
Turn travel photos into collectible ticket-style keepsakes.
8 followers
PicSlicer transforms travel photos into collectible, ticket-style keepsakes. Pick a layout, add your city, date, notes, and ticket number, then use smart color extraction to match the design to your photo. Browse memories in a timeline gallery, explore journeys with Ticket Footprints, and export high-resolution PNGs. Everything stays local—no account, ads, or analytics.






Love the local-first approach, and the smart color extraction is a really nice touch. One thing that would make this even better: add an option to pull EXIF metadata automatically so the city, date, and GPS coordinates fill in themselves instead of typing it all out by hand. Would save a ton of time on batch imports.
@saniyesnmeonja Thank you, Saniye — PicSlicer already reads available EXIF metadata to prefill the date and location, and you can still edit them manually. If a photo has been shared or transferred online, its metadata may have been stripped, so importing the original photo directly from the phone usually works best. You are right that we should make this behavior clearer, especially for batch imports. Thanks again for the thoughtful feedback!
Made a ticket from my Lisbon trip and the smart color extraction actually pulled the exact blue from the sky in my photo, which was a nice touch. Timeline gallery view makes scrolling through old trips feel like flipping through a passport.
@kadriyeukuehi6 Thank you, Kadriye! Lisbon sounds like a perfect match for that blue-sky palette. I love the passport comparison — that was exactly the feeling I hoped the timeline would create. Thanks for trying PicSlicer!
The ticket-style layout with smart color extraction actually picks up the dominant tones from your photo surprisingly well. Timeline gallery is a nice touch for flipping through trips without scrolling forever.
@okan0t4w Thank you, Okan! I am really happy the colors and timeline came through. I wanted the gallery to feel more like revisiting a trip than managing a camera roll. Thanks for checking it out!