One Pixel A Day.
Your Whole Year, At A Glance.

A calm mood and habit tracker that paints your year as a single image. Tap once to log the day. Watch the year fill in — no streaks to defend, no charts to feed, no judgment when you skip.

Available for iPhone

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Inktrack isn't built to make you track more. It's built to make tracking quiet enough that you actually keep doing it — and one day you look back and the year has painted itself.

Your Year, Painted

Days Become Patterns

Twelve months. 365 pixels. One screen. Each day is a single coloured square — and over weeks the year quietly composes itself into something only you could have made.

Year mosaic — mood tracker showing five months of orange and brown shades
The whole year on one screen — one pixel per day
Same year view, swiped to the energy tracker — violet palette, 160 days logged
Swipe sideways to flip between trackers — each in its own colour
Patterns screen — on-average value, longest streak, weekday rhythm, value distribution
Patterns, never verdicts — averages, weekdays, distribution
Settings — three trackers configured: mood, energy, workouts
Build the few trackers that actually matter to you
Widget gallery — year mosaic widget in light and dark mode
The whole year on your home screen — in light and dark
Widget gallery — tracker pulse stack widget showing three trackers, plus log buttons from Last Week, Big
Four widgets to choose from — one logs without opening the app
Why Most Trackers Burn You Out

The Numbers Trap

Most mood and habit apps want you to count. Streaks. Averages. Goals. They reward you with badges when you comply and shame you with broken chains when you don't.

When you skip a day — and you will — they push back. Red dots. Notifications. The math says you failed. After a few weeks you delete the app, and with it the data you might one day have wanted to look back on.

Inktrack does the opposite. Missed days are pixels of empty paper, not failures. The year fills naturally, at whatever pace yours does.

Open the app. Tap one button. The day is a colour now. Close the app. The year remembers — and slowly, without asking anything of you, becomes a single image of how it actually went.

Core Features

Quiet Tracking,
Built For The Long Run

Year Mosaic

Twelve months across, thirty-one days down. Your whole year on one screen — a single image you can take in at a glance.

Three Seconds To Log

Tap “today”, pick a shade, done. No mandatory journal entry, no sliders, no rating modal. The faster the loop, the more days you'll keep.

Trackers That Are Yours

Mood, energy, sleep, training, anything. Each tracker has its own colour, scale, and question. Build the few that actually matter to you — delete the rest.

Four Home-Screen Widgets

Year mosaic. Weekday rhythm. Last seven days with log buttons that work without opening the app. And a stack that shows three trackers at once.

Patterns, Never Verdicts

Weekday averages. Distribution. The longest run. Soft observations rendered the same way the year is — visually, calmly, no scoreboard.

All Local, All Yours

Everything lives in a SQLite file on your phone. Nothing is uploaded, nothing is synced, nothing is tracked. No account, no cloud — by design, not by promise.

The Psychology Behind It

Why Calm Tracking
Actually Sticks

Most tracking apps optimise for engagement, then call it self-knowledge. Inktrack optimises for the year you'll still be using it in.

01

No Streaks To Defend

The app doesn't count consecutive days. There's no chain to break, no badge to lose, no notification scolding you for skipping.

Why this matters: streak-anxiety is a documented driver of churn. People delete tracking apps after the first broken chain because the loss feels worse than the gain. Inktrack removes the chain entirely — so there's nothing to grieve and nothing to escape.

02

Visual Memory, Not Numbers

You don't read your year. You see it. Pattern recognition is faster, more honest, and works in the half-second a glance gives you.

Why this matters: the human brain is built to read patterns long before it's built to interpret numbers. A pixel-grid year exposes seasonal rhythms, slumps, and good stretches without a single chart axis to decode.

03

Three-Second Logging Loop

One tap to open, one tap to choose. No mandatory journal entry. No question you can avoid by closing the app.

Why this matters: every extra friction point lowers the chance you log tomorrow. The shorter the loop, the longer the habit holds — and the more meaningful the eventual year-view becomes.

04

Long-Horizon Reflection

Most apps show you yesterday. Inktrack shows you 365 days at once. The questions it lets you ask are different ones.

Why this matters: short-window reflection optimises for days. Long-window reflection lets you see seasons, life chapters, the shape of an actual year. That's where meaningful self-knowledge tends to live.

05

Privacy By Design

Everything lives in one SQLite file on your phone. No account. No server. No analytics SDK. Nothing leaves the device.

Why this matters: mood data is some of the most intimate data you can produce. Inktrack treats it that way — not by promising privacy in a policy, but by building so there's nothing to leak in the first place.

06

Sensory Calm

Newsreader italic. Paper and ink palette. Soft hairlines, generous space. Nothing flashes, nothing buzzes, nothing demands attention.

Why this matters: a tracking app you open every day is part of your daily sensory environment. Aggressive design accumulates as background stress. Quiet design accumulates as a small daily ritual you actually look forward to.

Design Philosophy

The dominant story in self-tracking is that more data leads to more self-knowledge. The honest version is that more data usually leads to more anxiety — and the apps that produce it know exactly which buttons to push.

Inktrack is built on the opposite premise. Less data, more attention. One tap, one colour, one day. The year colours itself.

The goal isn't to optimise you. The goal is to give you a quiet, beautiful place to notice — and to leave you alone the rest of the time.

Start The Year
That Will Paint Itself

NOK 49 — one-time. No subscriptions, no in-app purchases, no ads, ever. Yours for as long as you keep using it.

Download From App Store