Draw lines on golf swing video on iPhone.
Golf swing video becomes more useful when you can mark the actual frame. SwingDraw helps golfers draw checkpoints, review path and position, compare clips, and save the evidence from each practice session.
Why drawing tools still matter
A golf swing can look different depending on camera angle, club, drill, and tempo. Drawing a line on the exact frame gives you a visible reference point instead of relying on memory or a vague "looked better" feeling.
Useful lines are simple: spine angle, shaft plane, head position, hand path, shoulder tilt, hip line, or a checkpoint from a lesson. The point is not to decorate the video. The point is to make one change easier to see.
A practical iPhone review workflow
- Record or import a swing clip. Start with a down-the-line or face-on video from the range.
- Pause on the frame that matters. Review setup, takeaway, top, transition, impact, and finish slowly.
- Draw the checkpoint. Add the line or angle that makes the movement visible.
- Save context. Add the club, tag, note, favorite marker, or voice note that explains what you were practicing.
- Compare later. Put the clip next to an older or newer swing so progress is visible instead of guessed.
What to avoid
Do not draw every possible line on every clip. Pick the checkpoint that matches the lesson, drill, or ball flight you are trying to understand. A clean comparison is more useful than a screen covered with unrelated marks.
SwingDraw is built for this focused review style: one-time purchase, no in-app purchases, no ads, no subscription, and no need to move practice video into a generic editing app before you can learn from it.
Where SwingDraw fits
SwingDraw is not an automated coach and does not replace a lesson. It is a visual review tool for golfers who want to inspect their own swing video, keep a practice journal, and share annotated clips when a second set of eyes would help.