Last spring, Anthony Tabarez
celebrated prom like many of today’s high schoolers: dancing the night away and
capturing it through photos and videos. The snapshots show Tabarez, 18, and his
friends grinning, jumping around, and waving their arms from a crowded dance
floor.
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But instead of using his smartphone,
Tabarez documented prom night with an Olympus FE-230, a 7.1-megapixel, silver
digital camera made in 2007 and previously owned by his mother. During his
senior year of high school, cameras like it started appearing in classrooms and
at social gatherings. On prom night, Tabarez passed around his camera, which
snapped fuchsia-tinted photos that looked straight from the early aughts.
“We’re so used to our phones,” said
Tabarez, a freshman at California State University, Northridge. “When you have
something else to shoot on, it’s more exciting.”
The cameras of Generation Z’s childhoods,
seen as outdated and pointless by those who originally owned them, are in vogue
again. Young people are reveling in the novelty of an old look, touting digital
cameras on TikTok and sharing the photos they produce on Instagram. On TikTok,
the hashtag #digitalcamera has 184 million views.
A
photo by Anthony Tabarez, who shares photos on Instagram made with a digital
point-and-shoot camera made in 2007.
Modern influencers like Kylie Jenner, Bella
Hadid, and Charli D’Amelio are encouraging the fun and mimicking their early
2000s counterparts by taking blurry, overlit photos. Instead of paparazzi
publishing these photos in tabloids or on gossip websites, influencers are
posting them on social media.
Y2K
nostalgiaMost of today’s teenagers and youngest
adults were infants at the turn of the millennium. Gen Z-ers grew up with
smartphones, making stand-alone cameras and other gadgets unnecessary. They are
now in search of a break from their smartphones; last year, 36 percent of US
teenagers said they spent too much time on social media, according to the Pew
Research Center.
That respite is coming in part through
compact point-and-shoot digital cameras, uncovered by Gen Z-ers who are digging
through their parents’ junk drawers and shopping second-hand. Camera lines like
the Canon Powershot and Kodak EasyShare are among their finds, popping up at
parties and other social events.
Over the past few years, nostalgia for the
Y2K era, a time of both tech enthusiasm and existential dread that spanned the
late 1990s and early 2000s, has seized Generation Z. The nostalgia has spread
across TikTok, fueling fashion trends like low-rise pants, velour tracksuits,
and dresses over jeans. Mall-stalwart brands like Abercrombie & Fitch and
Juicy Couture have reaped the benefits; in 2021, Abercrombie reported its
highest net sales since 2014. Now, there is Y2K nostalgia for the technology
that captured these outfits when they were first popular.
This time, the poor picture quality is not
for lack of a better tool. It is on purpose.
Compared with today’s smartphones, older
digital cameras have fewer megapixels, which capture less detail, and built-in
lenses with higher apertures, which let in less light, both of which contribute
to lower-quality photos. But in a feed of more or less standard smartphone
photos, the quirks of photos taken with digital cameras are now considered
treasures instead of reasons for deletion.
“People are realizing it’s fun to have
something not attached to their phone,” said Mark Hunter, a photographer also known
as the Cobrasnake. “You’re getting a different result than you’re used to.
There’s a bit of delay in gratification.”
Hunter, 37, cut his teeth documenting
nightlife in the early aughts using his digital camera. In those photos,
celebrities — including a “You Belong With Me”-era Taylor Swift and the newly
famous Kim Kardashian — look like ordinary partygoers, caught in the harsh
light of Hunter’s camera.
He now photographs a new cohort of
influencers and stars, but the photos would be nearly indistinguishable from
his older ones if his subjects were clutching flip phones instead of iPhones.
They are rewinding the clock to 2007 and “basically reliving every episode of
‘The Simple Life’”, he said, referring to a reality television show from that
era.
A
photo by Zounia Rabotson of herself on a Canon PowerShot SX230 HS digital
camera, made in 2011.
But many new point-and-shoot digital
cameras come with today’s bells and whistles, and older models have been
discontinued, so people are turning to thrift stores and second-hand e-commerce
sites to find cameras with sufficiently vintage looks. On eBay, searches for
“digital camera” increased by 10 percent from 2021 to 2022, with searches for
specific models seeing even steeper jumps, said Davina Ramnarine, a company
spokesperson. For example, searches for “Nikon COOLPIX” increased by 90
percent, she said.
Between film and phoneRudra Sondhi, a freshman at McMaster
University in Hamilton, Ontario, started using his grandmother’s digital camera
because it seemed like a happy medium between film cameras and smartphones. He
estimates that he takes one photo with his digital camera for every five with
his smartphone.
“When I look back at my digital photos” —
from his actual camera — “I have very specific memories attached to them,”
Sondhi said. “When I go through the camera roll on my phone, I sort of remember
the moment and it’s not special.”
Sondhi, 18, shares photos taken with his
digital camera on a separate Instagram account, @rudrascamera. These photos
document the range of young adulthood, from goofing around in a college dorm
room to moshing at a performance by the Weeknd. When he takes out his camera,
he said, his friends immediately deem the moment special.
For Sadie Grey Strosser, 22, using digital
cameras has represented the beginning of a different life stage. She took a
semester off from Williams College during the pandemic and began using her
parents’ Canon Powershot. Her photography Instagram account, @mysexyfotos,
cataloged nights out and long drives in low-contrast, washed-out snapshots.
“I felt so off the grid, and it almost went
hand in hand, using a camera that wasn’t connected to a phone,” she said.
When her digital camera broke last summer,
Strosser said she was “so upset.” She later started using her grandmother’s
Sony Cyber-shot, which had “such a different character.” Meanwhile, she said,
if her iPhone broke, “I couldn’t care less.”
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