You’re probably not a stranger to filters for your social media uploads. While some apps just fix up your shots with minor touch-ups, others want to change the entire look and feel. Mocha Frame takes things a little further. It doesn’t just clean up your shots; it lets you frame them up or sign them before sharing them.
Mocha Frame, highlighted in a Reddit post by its developer, is an iPhone app built around presentation rather than heavy edits. The developer describes it as a tool for giving photos a cleaner, more elegant look before sharing, with minimal frames, Polaroid-style frames, creative collage layouts, and themed frames for different moods and festivals.

You get the camera nerd details
One of the app’s fun new tricks is the automatic EXIF reading. Mocha Frame can pull in details like aperture, shutter speed, ISO, focal length, device information, and location, then place those details into the final image. So it might be appealing to the camera community as well. You have probably seen these kinds of posts before, one where there is a tasteful white or black frame, with the camera model and lens settings displayed below like a mini museum label.
For those sharing on Threads, Instagram, or sharing a carousel post, the app can make iPhone shots look even more curated. There are also practical tools here. The app supports batch editing for up to 18 photos, lets users copy settings across images, save favorite frame and watermark setups as templates, and export either high-resolution files or compressed versions for social sharing.

Free to try, with paid extras
Mocha Frame is free to download and use, with a Pro plan for unlocking more frames, watermarks, templates, and batch export features. The listed pricing is fairly low: $3.99 per month, $6.99 per year, or $9.99 for a lifetime purchase.
But before you jump in, there are a few things to keep in mind. Based on early reviews, the experiences with free tiers might not be too great. So the app definitely wants you to go the premium route. Furthermore, Mocha Frame is not trying to replace Lightroom or Photoshop. It is just an app that wants to add a little more character to your pictures, which is evident with the Leica and Hasselblad filters.
