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How-To

Send Photos And Videos To Your Partner’s Lock Screen

Surprise your love with wallpapers that appear on the lock screen at every unlock — discreet, private and easy on Android.

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The problem

Sending isn't what it used to be

The word send has lost its weight. Until not that long ago, sending something carried a physical dimension: a letter, a postcard, a package. Between the moment you wrote it and the moment it arrived, days could pass, and that slowness was part of the gesture. Today send is a worn-out verb. We send hundreds of things a day without thinking — a link, a meme, a screenshot, a twenty-second voice note, a photo of what's in the fridge. All of those things travel instantly, chime on the recipient's phone, fight for a sliver of attention, and sink to the bottom of the chat within minutes. Inside a couple, that erosion hurts in a particular way. Because a big part of loving someone is sending them things: this reminded me of you, look at this sky, I thought of when. And all of those things, when sent through the usual channels, end up diluted in the same flow of notifications as work reminders and memes from the group chat. It's nobody's fault — simply, the medium is the same. Sending a wallpaper to your partner is something else. It isn't sending a message: it's sending presence. And presence doesn't open in a chat, it gets discovered on unlock.

How

Steps To Send A Wallpaper

  1. Pair With Your Partner

    Connect using a QR code (scan together, 10 minutes expiry), enter LOVE-XXXXXX manually, or send a remote invitation link (valid for 7 days).

  2. Create Your Wallpaper

    Use the built‑in editor to add text, stickers, drawings, gradients, emojis and GIFs.

  3. Send It Instantly Or Schedule It

    Manual Send delivers immediately. Premium lets you schedule delivery across different time zones.

  4. Your Partner Sees It On Their Lock Screen

    The wallpaper fills the lock screen (not a tiny widget). Wake Screen On Receive and Memory Wallpaper are available with Premium.

Key Features

Full Lock Screen Wallpaper

Your wallpaper fills the entire lock screen, delivering a true surprise.

Silent Delivery

No notification buzz — just a lovely moment when they unlock.

Native Android Live Wallpaper

A seamless, native lock screen experience on Android.

Works Without Both Online

You don’t both need to be online at the same moment for delivery.

Memory Wallpaper (Premium)

Auto‑restore a wallpaper after it’s viewed.

Wake Screen On Receive (Premium)

Wake the screen the moment a new wallpaper arrives.

Save Received Wallpapers

Save wallpapers to your gallery for later viewing.

QR Pairing & Remote Invites

Pair with LOVE-XXXXXX, or send a remote invitation (7 days).

Stories

Three ways of sending without sending

Sofia M. and Lucas R.

Ciudad Real ↔ Badajoz · long-distance during the week, together on weekends

Sofia works in Ciudad Real Monday through Friday; Lucas is in Badajoz. For months they kept sending each other photos of their day by WhatsApp — the morning coffee, the desk at the office, the quick dinner — and little by little they stopped, because the flow was so high they got tired of responding to each one. The change came from trying to send the same thing, but as a wallpaper instead of a message. At 7:44 on a Wednesday, Lucas unlocked his phone to turn off the alarm and found the coffee Sofia had just made in her kitchen in Ciudad Real. No ping. No reply queue. Just a presence. He says that morning started better than the last twenty.

Matilde F. and Vasco A.

Évora ↔ Badajoz · Portuguese-Spanish border · mixed couple

Matilde is Portuguese and Vasco is from Extremadura. They met at a festival in Cáceres and now keep the relationship going by crossing the border every few weekends. Vasco says the word send wore out for him years ago with WhatsApp, and that at first he didn't quite understand what made LockLove different from any other app. He understood the first time Matilde sent him a wallpaper. It was a photo of the bridge over the Guadiana taken from the Portuguese side, with the time printed on top: 13:09. Vasco stared at it on the lock screen without opening it, without unlocking. He says it was the first time in years that sending something felt like the weight of sending a letter. Small, silent, delivered as it should be.

Helena B. and Gabriel V.

Mérida ↔ Lisbon · Spanish-Portuguese couple · one hour time difference

Gabriel lives in Lisbon for work and Helena stayed in Mérida. Between WhatsApp, Instagram, and email, they had plenty of channels to talk. What they didn't have was a way to leave something for the other without interrupting their day. Helena discovered LockLove and proposed to Gabriel a kind of pact: neither of them was going to write sweet things on WhatsApp anymore — those would go as wallpapers instead. They kept it up for two weeks and the texture of the relationship changed. At 17:29 Lisbon time — 16:29 in Mérida — Gabriel unlocked his phone and saw a photo of Helena's patio with a single word on top: breathe. It didn't ask for a reply. It had no emoji. It was exactly what he needed.

Essay

Sending isn't what it used to be

The verb send comes from the Latin inviare, which literally means to put on the way. When you sent something — a letter, a package, a parcel — you put it on the way and accepted that it would take time to arrive. Slowness was part of the gesture. It gave it weight. The letter had to cross miles, pass through unknown hands, wait in a drawer at a post office, travel between cities. When it arrived, it arrived carrying the memory of that whole journey stuck to it.

It wasn't sending that was worn out. It was the channel we sent everything through.

Today send means something else. You press a button, the other person receives it instantly, and right away there's a ding. The time between sending and delivery has been reduced to zero. The problem is that that zero has taken away a lot of the weight of the gesture. Sending a beautiful sky by WhatsApp at three in the afternoon is technically the same thing as sending a meeting reminder at that hour. Same channel, same form, same notification. The intention gets lost in the flow.

Sending a wallpaper is a way of reintroducing some of that old weight. Not because the technology is slower — it isn't — but because the format forces something different. You don't write to be answered; you leave something to be found. The recipient doesn't open it, they discover it when they pick up their phone for any other reason. You don't react to it, you receive it. Not more messages, just better ones. Bring your presence to their lock screen, leave it there waiting, and step out of the channel where everything else in the day is competing. From Barcelona, with love — so that sending can once again carry the weight of putting on the way.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I start sending wallpapers to my partner?
Install LockLove on Android, open the app, and pair with a QR code, LOVE-XXXXXX, or a remote invitation link to begin.
Is my partner’s wallpaper private?
Yes. Only you and your paired partner can see the wallpapers, keeping everything private.
Can I schedule wallpapers across time zones?
Yes. Premium lets you schedule delivery in any timezone.
What happens if one of us is offline?
The system works without both of you being online at the same time; wallpapers deliver when possible.
Can I save received wallpapers to my gallery?
Yes, with Premium you can save received wallpapers to your gallery for keeps.
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