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Android Central
Android Central
Technology
Jay Bonggolto

Motorola’s new Razr turns Google Photos into a stylist and a memory hub

Motorola Razr 2026 display with an image of someone lounging on a chair.

What you need to know

  • Google Photos is evolving from a simple gallery into a personal stylist and daily content hub on Motorola’s new Razr devices.
  • The new “Wardrobe” feature turns your photo library into a digital closet, automatically identifying and organizing clothes and accessories.
  • Motorola is also the first to embed Memories into its new “Daily Drops” feed, which combines news, weather, calendar info, and photo memories into a twice-daily personalized dashboard.

Motorola and Google want to change the way you use your photo gallery. Soon, Google Photos will work more like a personal stylist and a daily content hub. With the new Razr lineup, Motorola is adding two features that take Photos beyond its usual job.

Later this summer, a new feature called Wardrobe will arrive on select Android devices. It's intended to create a digital closet using your own photos, so you won’t have to scroll through years of vacation pictures to find that jacket you wore once. Google Photos will find every clothing item and accessory it sees, cut them out neatly, and display them like a shopping catalog, but everything is already yours.

If you’re packing for a trip or rushing to get ready for dinner, Wardrobe lets you mix and match outfits, try on different looks, and save your favorites right in Photos. You can also share them with friends.

Memories on your home screen

Motorola is fully embracing this idea. The company has used Photos as its default gallery app for years, and now it’s the first mobile partner to add Google Photos Memories directly into its content feed.

Called Daily Drops, this feed is a personalized hub that updates twice a day with headlines, calendar summaries, weather, and now, your best moments from Memories.

When you wake up and swipe over, you might see that beach sunset from three months ago next to your morning coffee and today’s schedule.

(Image credit: Android Central)

There are a few requirements to keep in mind. You must be at least 16 years old and have face grouping turned on to use Wardrobe. If you want Daily Drops to show your schedule, you’ll need to give access to Google Calendar. Of course, Google Photos access is required. The feature will begin arriving on Android devices in June 2026, starting in certain regions.

Motorola says Daily Drops is already rolling out on select Motorola phones in Europe, North America, Latin America, and Asia. The new Razr family will get it soon after launch.

Android Central's Take

Letting Google automatically organize every flannel and pair of sneakers from my camera roll does sound helpful. For anyone who is indecisive or tends to over-pack, this could actually save some time. But it feels a bit odd to need a search engine to remind you what you already own. If your closet is so messy that only machine learning can sort it out, maybe the real answer is to spend twenty minutes folding clothes. Motorola and Google say this is about self-expression and individuality, but honestly, giving photos of every shirt you’ve worn to an algorithm so it can suggest outfits is a more stylish way to give more data.

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