You just got back from a trip. Your phone is full of photos. You want to share the experience — not just a flat photo dump, but something that actually shows where you went and what you saw.
The problem? Most tools that do this require an account, a subscription, or they store your photos on their servers indefinitely.
There's a better way.
Why Most Travel Map Tools Fall Short
Apps like Google My Maps, Polarsteps, and Wanderlog are useful, but they share the same fundamental issue: your data lives on someone else's server. You create an account, upload your memories, and at some point you'll either hit a paywall or wonder who exactly has access to your photos.
Traditional Tools
- ✗Requires account sign-up
- ✗Photos stored on their servers
- ✗Paywall for key features
- ✗Data locked in their platform
Cinemaly
- ✓No login, no account
- ✓Photos never leave your browser
- ✓Completely free
- ✓Output is a portable .html file
What an Interactive Travel Map Actually Needs
A good travel map should do three things:
- Show your route — not just pins, but the actual journey from city to city
- Display your photos — in context, attached to the locations where they were taken
- Be shareable — without requiring the recipient to create an account
That's it. Everything else is noise.
How to Create One With Cinemaly
Cinemaly is a free browser-based tool that does exactly this. There's no account, no server, and your photos never leave your device.
Upload your photos
Drag and drop your travel photos into the upload area. Add general trip photos, or attach specific photos to individual cities — those appear directly on the map at that location.
Define your route
Add the cities and countries you visited, in order. Write a short note for each stop — a memory, a recommendation, anything you want viewers to read as they explore the map.
Compile your capsule
Click "Compile Capsule" and Cinemaly generates a single .html file and
downloads it. That file is your interactive travel map — no internet
connection required to view it.
What the Result Looks Like
When someone opens your capsule in a browser, they see a dark cinematic map. As they scroll, the map automatically flies to each city on your route. Your photos appear alongside the city names and notes.
Because the file is just HTML, it will still open correctly in ten years. No app to update, no service to stay online, no account to maintain.
A Note on Privacy
Because everything runs in your browser, Cinemaly never sees your photos or your route. There's no analytics on what you upload, no cloud storage, no account linked to your data.
The output file also contains your photos embedded as a ZIP archive — which means you can open it with 7-Zip or WinRAR and extract the original photos at any time. Your memories are always accessible, in their original format.
Who This Is For
- Travelers who want to document a trip and share it with friends or family
- Digital nomads who move frequently and want a running archive of their journeys
- Anyone who prefers keeping personal photos off third-party servers
Questions or feedback? Reach out via the contact page.
Related Reads
- Cinemaly for iOS: Travel Capsules, App Store Review, and the Cnmly Format
- Cinemaly for Android: Native Travel Capsules, Sharing, and the .cnmly Format
- 7 Ways to Document Your Travels Without Cloud Storage
- Polarsteps vs Cinemaly: Which Should You Use?
- How I Finally Documented My Amsterdam Trip
- From Europe to Istanbul — Documenting the experience with Cinemaly