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  Now in early access

A life is too big for one person to tell alone.

Memoire helps families gather the voices, stories, and small moments of the people they love — and weave them into a timeline that will outlast any of us.

E
Eleanor Ruiz · 1941 — 2019 · Recorded 2018
“The kitchen always smelled like bread on Sundays — that was my mother. Her hands were flour before they were anything else.”
How it works

Three quiet steps, then a lifetime.

01

Start a library

Add the person you want to remember. Invite the family in — siblings, cousins, kids — as many voices as you can.

02

Send gentle prompts

Memoire suggests specific, patient prompts. “Tell me about the house you grew up in.” They record a reply whenever they’re ready.

03

Watch a life take shape

We weave the recordings into a chapter-by-chapter timeline. Transcribed, searchable, shareable. Yours to keep.

The timeline

Scrub through a life like turning pages.

Every memory lives on a chapter of the timeline — by year, by place, by person. Swipe back to a childhood summer. Land on the day a grandchild was born. Follow a thread.

1934196219872005now
1987
Moving to Chicago
“The apartment had one window…”
1962
The house on Elm
“Sunday mornings always smelled like bread.”

Start with one person. Start today.

The hardest part of remembering someone is beginning. Memoire gives you a quiet place to start, and the family to finish it with you.

Start a library — free
Free for the first person. Always yours to export.