One QR across multiple buildings
Estate weddings move between the orangery, the great hall, and the gardens. PicShots collects uploads from every space into one shared gallery without any host effort.
For estate and country house weddings · King West, Toronto, Canada
King West in Toronto is known for restaurants, warehouse-style venues, rooftop receptions, and lively after-parties. Restaurant venues, reception halls, and hotel event spaces fit well. PicShots gives every guest one QR scan, no app install, and a shared gallery the host controls.
King West, Toronto, Canada
King West is known for restaurants, warehouse-style venues, rooftop receptions, and lively after-parties. Restaurant venues, reception halls, and hotel event spaces fit well.
Why PicShots fits
Estate weddings move between the orangery, the great hall, and the gardens. PicShots collects uploads from every space into one shared gallery without any host effort.
Estate weddings often run past midnight. Guests can keep uploading into the same gallery for as long as the camera flow stays open.
Many couples want the album curated before guests see anything. Keep the gallery hidden during the weekend and reveal it once you've reviewed every shot.
Estate weddings are usually printed into albums or thank-you books. A single ZIP from the host dashboard gives you everything for the editor.
Setup tips
Estate weddings hand out welcome packs at arrival. Adding the QR there keeps the guest camera visible from Friday afternoon onward.
Estates have multiple drinks rooms and corridors. Repeat the QR in each space so guests rejoin the camera flow as they move through the building.
Most estate weddings open with a host welcome speech. A 10-second QR mention there is the single biggest lift in participation.
Toronto weddings often blend two cultural traditions — a short note on the QR card that the gallery is private until reveal raises participation across both sides.
Place QR cards near the bar and guestbook because King West events often use open social layouts.
FAQ
Yes. PicShots runs in the browser, so King West hosts can use one QR code across arrivals, dinner, speeches, and dancing. Guests do not need an account or app install.
Restaurant venues, reception halls, and hotel event spaces fit well. 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 country estates hosted in Toronto, Canada 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 Distillery District lofts to Muskoka cottage retreats, Toronto events span urban and lakeside settings. Common settings include Distillery District venues, King West warehouse spaces, Lakefront ballroom hotels, Muskoka cottage retreats. 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. Canada hosts can budget in CAD (C$); free for events up to 10 guests, with paid tiers covering up to 250 guests.
PicShots needs a network connection to upload, but uploads queue and retry once a guest reaches better signal. Place QR reminders near rooms with strong Wi-Fi.
Yes. Keep the gallery hidden during the entire weekend so guests only see their own photos. Reveal the shared gallery any time afterwards.
Usually not. PicShots uses no extra gear and runs in guests' phones. Most estate teams welcome a guest camera since it captures the venue from angles their preferred photographer cannot.
Create one PicShots event, place the QR where King West guests naturally gather, and bring every candid into a single shared gallery you control.