One QR across the whole weekend
Welcome dinner, beach ceremony, reception, brunch — PicShots collects all of it into one shared gallery without scattering uploads across days or platforms.
For beachfront and destination events · Ginza, Tokyo, Japan
Ginza in Tokyo is known for polished restaurants, hotels, private dining, and formal receptions. Restaurant venues and hotel ballrooms are the strongest fits. PicShots gives every guest one QR scan, no app install, and a shared gallery the host controls.
Ginza, Tokyo, Japan
Ginza is known for polished restaurants, hotels, private dining, and formal receptions. Restaurant venues and hotel ballrooms are the strongest fits.
Why PicShots fits
Welcome dinner, beach ceremony, reception, brunch — PicShots collects all of it into one shared gallery without scattering uploads across days or platforms.
Destination guests arrive tired and rarely want to install anything. Scan-and-shoot in the browser is the only camera flow that consistently lands.
Some of the best destination wedding shots happen poolside between scheduled events. PicShots stays available for those candids without anyone running a camera.
Destination weddings produce keepsake books, recap films, and thank-you notes. A ZIP download from the host dashboard is the fastest path to all three.
Setup tips
Destination guests use welcome bags constantly — putting the QR on the tag keeps the guest camera visible from the moment guests check in.
Beach venues live for golden-hour ceremonies. A 10-second mention before either window lifts uploads more than any signage placement.
Multi-day events should allow more shots per guest than single-day weddings. Start around 60–100 per guest and adjust based on event length.
Tokyo events run to the minute — placing the QR on the printed programme means guests scan it during the first moment of downtime.
Use discreet table cards with a short English/Japanese prompt for international guest lists.
FAQ
Yes. PicShots runs in the browser, so Ginza hosts can use one QR code across arrivals, dinner, speeches, and dancing. Guests do not need an account or app install.
Restaurant venues and hotel ballrooms are the strongest fits. The safest setup is one QR on arrival signage and one QR at each table or guest zone.
Yes. PicShots runs entirely in the mobile browser, so it works for beach resorts hosted in Tokyo, Japan the same way it does anywhere else. Guests scan the event QR, type a display name, and start shooting — no app install, no account, no extra software.
From hotel chapels in Shinjuku to ryokan-style retreats, Tokyo events balance traditional ceremony with high-energy receptions. Common settings include Hotel chapel weddings in Shinjuku, Garden ceremonies at Meiji Jingu Gaien, Ginza event halls, Ryokan retreats outside the city. PicShots only needs guests' phones and a network connection, so the venue side is rarely the constraint.
Pricing displays per event and is shown in the currency the host signs up with. Japan hosts can budget in JPY (¥); free for events up to 10 guests, with paid tiers covering up to 250 guests.
Uploads need a network connection. Many resorts have guest Wi-Fi at the bar or restaurants — place QR reminders near those zones so uploads happen between activities.
Yes. Higher per-guest shot allowances and a single QR keep the gallery growing across welcome dinners, ceremony, reception, and farewell brunches.
Yes. Download the full ZIP from the host dashboard and select your favourites for keepsake notes, recap films, or printed albums.
Create one PicShots event, place the QR where Ginza guests naturally gather, and bring every candid into a single shared gallery you control.