No social feed
Zero public content. There's no wall, no likes, no followers, no discovery. This isn't a social network: it's a private channel between exactly two people.
We live in a moment where couples, by default, are exposed. Instagram asks for content, TikTok asks for content, WhatsApp statuses ask for content, and even though nobody is obligated to post anything, the design of almost every app gently pushes toward sharing. Most of the tools couples use today — from photo apps to messaging apps — are built assuming that showing is good. The more, the better. But there are countless couples in the world — millions, on every continent — for whom that assumption doesn't hold. Couples who understand affection as something intimate between husband and wife, between engaged partners, between two people who have chosen each other. Couples who come from traditions where publicly displaying the relationship isn't part of their language, and where privacy isn't an extra but the foundation. For those couples, the problem with today's tools isn't the quality of the content or the price of the plan. It's structural: they're built on the wrong end of the spectrum. What's missing is something else — a tool where sharing doesn't mean exposing. Where two people can leave beautiful things for each other without anyone else seeing them, with no feed, no likes, no discovery algorithm. Just the two of you, on each other's screen.
Zero public content. There's no wall, no likes, no followers, no discovery. This isn't a social network: it's a private channel between exactly two people.
The wallpaper appears on the phone's lock screen, which is the most private space on the device. Nobody else sees it, unless they're holding the phone in that exact moment.
No sound, no banner, no pop-up, no vibration. The wallpaper changes silently. Nobody around knows that anything has arrived.
LockLove connects exactly two people who pair with each other. There are no groups, no friend lists, no discover tab. No strangers, no chance, no algorithm: just the two of you.
If someone walks past the phone, all they see is a nice wallpaper. There's no new-chat icon, no counter, no red badge. Nothing that can be misread or commented on.
LockLove doesn't dictate what can or can't be sent. Every couple decides what's appropriate within their own values — photos, words, drawings, calligraphy, landscapes, whatever the other person needs to see that day.
Zero public content. No posts, no likes, no followers. This is not social media — it's a private channel between two people.
The wallpaper appears on the lock screen. No one else sees it unless they're holding the phone. It's the most private space on their device.
No notification sound, no banner, no popup. The wallpaper appears silently. No one around them knows it changed.
LockLove connects exactly two partners. No groups, no friends lists, no discover tab. Just the two of you.
Schedule encouraging wallpapers during fasting. Send Eid greetings that appear at sunrise. Stay connected during the holiest month.
Husband in the Gulf, family at home. Schedule wallpapers across time zones. Be present without needing both of you awake.
Nothing pops up that could be misunderstood. No notification banners. No chat bubbles. Just a wallpaper that changed silently.
Even if family members use the same device, the wallpaper is just a lock screen image. No app to accidentally open, no chat history to stumble upon.
Schedule wallpapers of encouragement during days of fasting, or an Eid greeting at dawn. Quiet presence during the most intimate month of the year.
If your husband works away and the family stayed home, scheduled wallpapers cross time zones. You're present without needing to be awake at the same time.
Even if other family members use the same device, the wallpaper is just an image on the lock screen. There's no chat history to open by mistake, no visible app that would need to be explained.
Engaged couples who respect limits according to their own values can use LockLove to leave kind words, calligraphy, landscapes. A private channel with no public or exposing component.
Istanbul · newlyweds · both working in different neighborhoods
Zahra works near Kadıköy and Yusuf crosses to the European side every morning by ferry. They don't really use social media and preferred not to mix the relationship with work chats on their phones. A friend of Zahra's recommended LockLove to them precisely because it had no feed and no public component. Yusuf scheduled the first wallpaper for Zahra for 9:06 on a Tuesday — a photo of the Bosphorus taken from the ferry with the time printed on top and no text. Zahra found it as she came out of a meeting, with no notification, no alert. She says it was the first thing in months that made her smile without having to respond to anyone.
Jakarta ↔ Abu Dhabi · he's working abroad · two small kids at home
Khalid has been working in Abu Dhabi for almost a year while Aisha stayed in Jakarta with their two small children. They used to talk by video call on weekends, but during the week coordinating schedules was impossible. Aisha tried LockLove because a cousin showed it to her: no feed, no public profile, and the wallpapers appeared without notifications. Khalid now schedules two wallpapers a day for her — one at 7:18 Jakarta time, before the kids wake up, and another at 21:58 when she's already put them to bed. She says that during those few seconds it takes her to unlock the phone is the only moment of the day when she feels that Khalid is in the same room.
Kuala Lumpur · engaged · her family lives on the floor below
Layla and Omar are engaged but not yet married, and during the period leading up to the wedding they still live with their respective families. Layla wanted a way to leave Omar some nice detail each day without her cousin or her mother being able to see anything on the phone if they picked it up — because at home, picking up each other's phone for any reason is normal. LockLove fit exactly because of that. Omar schedules a wallpaper for her every morning before she leaves for work. Nothing explicit, nothing that could be commented on. Just a nice image with a kind word on top. Both families have seen it at some point without understanding what it was, and thought it was a nice wallpaper. Which was exactly what they both wanted.
There's a relatively modern idea, very Western and very much from the last twenty years, that says everything good is meant to be shared. If something makes you happy, post it. If you're on vacation, publish it. If your partner surprised you, tell the story. The more you share, the thinking goes, the more it's worth. That idea has colonized much of the design of phone apps, and it has changed, without any announcement, the way many couples live their relationship — for better or worse, but always defaulting outward.
What's intimate doesn't ask for an audience. It asks for a tool that respects it.
But if you step out of the small cultural ecosystem where that idea was born, you discover that most of the planet understands affection in the opposite way. In an enormous part of the world — in Muslim traditions, in many Asian cultures, in rural communities on any continent, and also in countless Western couples who are simply discreet by temperament — what's valuable is precisely the opposite: affection that's cared for, that isn't displayed, that's lived in private, that's reserved for the two of you. Not because it has to be hidden, but because showing it publicly wears it down, cheapens it, turns it into something else.
That discretion isn't a concession or a technological limitation: it's a positive value. It's the affirmation that what's intimate has its own space and deserves tools that respect it. LockLove isn't designed against social media — it's designed for the other end of the spectrum, for couples who want a channel where sharing doesn't mean exposing. No feed, no likes, no discovery, no strangers. Bring your presence to their lock screen. No notifications. No alerts. Just magic. A quiet, intimate space, just for two. From Barcelona, with love — for couples who always knew intimacy was the starting point, not an optional setting.
Download the app and start sharing love on every lock screen.