Our Take
Alina Tyslenok, Munis Abbas, Samuel Monteiro, and Sean Ryan built Gather because they were tired of losing track of cool stuff they found online. You've been there—you see something brilliant, maybe it's a Dribbble shot, a font, a color palette, an article, whatever—and you think "I'll bookmark it for later." And then you never look at it again because holy crap where did that go was it in my browser bookmarks or my Pocket or my Notes app or did I just screenshot it oh god it's lost forever. Gather fixes that. It's your personal visual library for everything you want to remember.
Think of it as a second brain for your internet finds. You save something once—whether it's an image, a link, a reference, whatever—and Gather organizes it in one beautiful, searchable place. No more hunting through eleven different apps to find that one font you saw three weeks ago. You've got Tags, Elements, Links, Images—all indexed and ready. The demo shows collections spanning wallpapers, app designs, fonts, cool websites, even cars and food. Whatever you're into, Gather makes it findable.
Four makers built this. There's no funding announced, no flashy Series A, just a tool that solves a problem nearly everyone has. In a world full of apps trying to automate your entire life, Gather is refreshingly niche—they just want to help you remember the good stuff.
The people behind Gather
Links
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