Business
VSCO acquires video editing startup Rylo
The photo-sharing app behind the 2019 meme craze “VSCO girls” has acquired Rylo, a video editing startup founded by the original developer of Instagram’s Hyperlapse.
A spokesperson for VSCO, an 8-year-old subscription-based business on track to surpass 4 million paying users, declined to disclose the terms of the deal. Rylo had raised roughly $38 million in venture capital funding, reaching a valuation of $120.25 million with a $20 million Series B announced in October 2018, according to data collected by PitchBook.
San Francisco-based Rylo was backed by a number of institutional investors, including Sequoia Capital, Alumni Ventures Group, Icon Ventures and Accel—a Silicon Valley venture capital fund and key stakeholder in Oakland-based VSCO.
Founded in 2015, Rylo is best known for its 360° camera capable of creating cinematic video in 5.8k resolution. The device previously retailed for nearly $500 but now sells for as low as $250 on BestBuy.com. Under VSCO’s ownership, Rylo will focus exclusively on building out its mobile video editing tools for mobile. The company tells us it will not continue to manufacture and sell its signature device but will continue to honor the warranty on previously sold cameras.
Rylo was launched by Alex Karpenko and Chris Cunningham. Karpenko, Rylo’s chief executive officer, previously founded Luma Camera in 2011, a video-capture, stabilization and sharing app acquired by Instagram in 2013. The deal marked Instagram’s first-ever acquisition; the app was subsequently shut down, with Karpenko joining Instagram’s team as a software engineer. Karpenko became key developer of Hyperlapse, Instagram’s time-lapse video app.
Cunningham, for his part, focused on iLife, Aperture and iPhoto for iOS as an engineer at Apple from 2008 to 2013. Cunningham eventually exited Apple for Facebook-owned Instagram, where he worked as an iOS engineer focused on Instagram Direct.
VSCO, led by co-founder and chief executive officer Joel Flory, charges users $19.99 per month for access to a full-suite of mobile photo-editing tools, exclusive photo filters, tutorials and more. In a recent interview with TechCrunch, Flory outlined ambitions to expand beyond photo-sharing and editing to video and illustration. The company’s latest deal, its first since its 2015 acquisitions of Moving Sciences and Artifact Uprising, confirms its intent to grow the business and carve out new revenue streams.
“We’ve seen video editing double on VSCO and DSCO, our GIF creation tool remains one of our most popular features,” Flory writes in a company blog post. “It’s clear that our users want more video tools and new ways to tell their stories through creative self-expression.”
-
Entertainment6 days ago
CES 2025 highlights: 12 new gadgets you can buy already
-
Entertainment7 days ago
NASA asked for cheaper ways to get Mars samples. It had one all along.
-
Entertainment5 days ago
‘American Primeval’ review: Can Netflix’s grimy Western mini-series greatest ‘Yellowstone’?
-
Entertainment6 days ago
What’s new to streaming this week? (Jan. 10, 2025)
-
Entertainment5 days ago
Tesla launched the new Model Y in China. Here’s what you need to know
-
Entertainment4 days ago
Space calendar 2025: Here are the moments you won’t want to miss
-
Entertainment4 days ago
CES 2025: Hands on with the airy Asus Zenbook A14
-
Entertainment3 days ago
Eight ways Mark Zuckerberg changed Meta ahead of Trump’s inauguration