照片桌布傳送到鎖屏與主畫面
免費方案就能把照片做成鎖屏桌布,還能同時套用在主畫面。
Take a look at your phone for a second. Count them. There are social networks, an inbox that never sleeps, three messaging apps with red bubbles, a calendar that beeps, a weather widget, a news widget, two productivity apps, one with deals from a supermarket you don't even go to. Every inch of screen has been negotiated with someone who wants something from you. Every notification is a commercial deal dressed up as an alert. And then, right before all of that, there's the lock screen. The last place you see without scrolling. The only gap in your day when your phone still hasn't asked anything of you. For most people, it's a factory default, a generic sunset, an old photo from last summer you don't even look at anymore. It's a blank space. And precisely because it's blank, it's the only place where an intimate gesture can show up without competing against anything. No algorithms. No badges. Nobody who needs your attention to sell you something. Just a moment, before the day begins.
選擇配對方式:掃描 QR 碼、輸入 LOVE-XXXXXX,或使用遙距邀請連結。
在內建編輯器裡加入文字、貼紙、GIF 等,打造專屬風格。
選擇立即傳送或跨時區定時傳送,兩人皆能享受靜默傳遞。
對方收到時,鎖屏桌布會立刻出現,Wake Screen 會在接收時喚醒。
在 Wallpaper history 中查看與保存你們的桌布紀錄。
免費方案就能把照片做成鎖屏桌布,還能同時套用在主畫面。
文字、貼紙、繪圖、漸層、表情符號與 GIF,自己搞出專屬風格。
輕點即送,立刻傳送到對方裝置。
只有配對的另一半能看到桌布,整個體驗零廣告。
快速配對,掃描 QR 或輸入 LOVE-XXXXXX 即可。
分開也能彼此邀約,連結有效期為 7 天。
查看與回放已傳送的桌布,方便重新發送或重新編輯。
Málaga · living together, apart all day
Eight years together. They share an apartment in central Málaga, but between Catalina's hospital shifts and Álvaro's film shoots, three days can pass without their waking hours overlapping. They used to leave notes on the fridge. Now, when Catalina gets home at night, she schedules a wallpaper for Álvaro to find when he wakes up. On Wednesday at 5:33, Álvaro grabs his phone to turn off the alarm and sees a photo of the living room in the dark, with two empty beers on the table and the line 'still here.' He doesn't delete it all day. What used to be a magnet note on the fridge now lives in the one place on his phone that nobody had sold to anybody yet.
Marbella ↔ Almería · mismatched shifts
Benicio works as a seasonal lifeguard in Marbella; Fátima coordinates a shelter in Almería. Three and a half hours by car, but shifts that never line up. They decided to use the lock screen as a silent mailbox. No chat, no missed calls: just a wallpaper every morning. On a Saturday at 6:17, Fátima opens her eyes before the sun and unlocks her phone to check the sea forecast. Instead of the temperature, a selfie of Benicio on the lifeguard tower appears, hair tousled, a tiny note in the corner: 'sea's flat, I miss you more than usual today.' Fátima smiles and saves the photo to the quiet drawer of good days.
Córdoba · settled couple, two kids
Fifteen years of marriage, two small children, and the feeling that nobody really looks at anybody anymore. Gadea installed LockLove a bit out of desperation, without telling Horacio. The first week she sent him little things — a single emoji, a photo of her morning coffee. The second week, Horacio started replying with wallpapers of his own. One afternoon at 16:44, Gadea has just loaded the kids into grandpa's car, looks at her phone, and sees a photo Horacio took of her sneakers by the front door with the line 'so glad they're back.' She cried a little in the school parking lot. It had been months since she felt seen in her own home.
There was a time when the lock screen didn't mean anything. It was a default image: a mountain, a beach, a flower. The manufacturer picked it. You changed it three times and then forgot about it. It was like the screensaver on old computers: it was there because something had to be there. And then they started invading it. First the notifications under the clock. Then the widgets. Then the shortcuts. Then the OS recommendations, the calendar suggestions, the weather alerts, the fitness app reminders. Without anybody explicitly deciding it, the lock screen became just another commercial surface, another opportunity for someone to nudge you into doing something.
Every pixel on your phone works for someone. The lock screen is the last one that can still work for the two of you.
The modern phone works like this: every pixel has to work for someone. If not for Meta, then for Google. If not for Google, then for a brand. If not for a brand, then for your own productive self, the one that reminds you of your to-dos at 8:41 in the morning before you've even gotten out of bed. The attention economy leaves no gaps. And precisely because of that, reclaiming a black square of pixels for something that isn't work, or a task, or advertising, or urgency, is a quiet way of standing your ground.
LockLove didn't invent the lock screen. It just decided to give it back to two people. When your partner lands there, they don't find a widget, or an ad, or a reminder. They find a photo from you. A note from you. A gesture from you. No notifications. No alerts. Just magic. Not more messages, better ones. It's very little and, at the same time, it's everything: the last corner of the phone you can still dedicate to someone without anybody taking a commission along the way. From Barcelona, with love, for those who want to set aside at least one slice of screen for what matters.
下載 App,開始在每次鎖定畫面跟伴侶分享愛意。