When photos come alive

(A version of this story appeared in June 2016.)

I think kids today are missing out.

They’re missing out on one of my all-time favorite hobbies. When I was young, my mom kept a large, green shoebox full of family pictures in her bedroom closet. When I was bored or felt blue and needed a pick-me-up I’d pull the box out to look at and reminisce about past vacations and family milestones.

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We weren’t a big photo family. We didn’t have any natural photographers in our family and this obviously was well before the age of the selfie. However, I used to love looking over the photos we took and had packed away.

I’d spend hours looking over each picture, my mind racing thinking back on where we were, who we were with and what we were doing. They were all mixed together. Some very old, some recently taken. Most of the pictures were in color, but there were a few faded instant Polaroids and black-and-whites too.  There were pictures of our Christmas trip in the mid 70s to Florida; our trip watching the wild horses on Assateague Island in Maryland; and birthdays for all three of us kids.

Nothing like the original

We keep our photos today online via a number of different social media outlets or stored on our personal computer (with back-ups.) The photos are still there, but we’ve fallen behind in getting our photos professionally printed out. We still have our version of the photo box, but there’s a clear delineation that shows the growth of technology. The actual photos are rather old.

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I love technology so I think it’s wonderful that we’ve grown as a society, but I also think it’s neat sometimes to skim through the real thing, the real printed photos. If I visited my mother today, I’d still probably be able to find that original box of photos. I’d touch and feel the photos and be taken back immediately to the moment.  I’d look for the ones with my brothers  and make fun of their dorky haircuts. I laugh because they both have full heads of hair now and well . . . yea, I’m losing mine. I’d look for the ones of my mom in knee-high 60s boots and shake my head questioning how she went from Amish garb to go-go boots and Laugh-In dancer look-alike.  I’d even stop and look at the one of me as a fourth- or fifth-grader at some amusement park with my arm around a plastic, make-believe American Indian girl. The look on my face is one of obvious disgust and fear of “catching the cuties,” albeit plastic ones.

Still fun all these years later

Oh hell, just thinking about our old pictures makes me want to pull up all the ones that my wife and I have taken over the years. Yes, it’s different, but maybe different isn’t such a bad thing? At least then I could import the most embarrassing pictures of my kids and post them immediately to Facebook or Twitter.

How about the shot of my oldest son dressed up in a pair of tights doing his best Mr. Incredible pose or the picture of my daughter as a young infant with spaghetti sauce covering her face? Or even one of my youngest son wearing his big sister’s ballerina tutu?

The choices are endless and oh so embarrassing. Hmm, as I think more about it, this new tradition might work out just fine after all.


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31 thoughts on “When photos come alive

  1. My youngest daughter (now 51) is like you. Being the last child, she was often shortchanged on having her picture taken, but we have a whole bunch of undeveloped film that probably includes her. At the time we probably couldn’t afford to have them developed. I am learning to enjoy the technology of today, where you can take pictures at a glance and see the results immediately.

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  2. This is so dear to my heart and brings back so many memories of going through the photos. I love the actual photos and I’m in the process. Like you, most enjoy actual physical photos now that retired. I am making my own photo album since the beginning of time trying to kind of put them in some sort of order for my children to enjoy. I still order copies and put them in books.

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  3. I love old photos. My dad had most of his rolls of film developed onto slides. His old slides I’ve been working through remembering the trips we took, the fun times we had, and even thinking where was I when he and my mom went on a trip I don’t remember them taking. The memories will live on and are being preserved in the digital age by digitisation.

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  4. We weren’t constantly taking photos ‘way back then’, but my mom did have several thick photo albums (remember the little black corners used to hold the photo to the paper?). After all 3 of us were adults, she chose one Christmas to give each of us our own photo album, made with photos she had taken out of hers. Talk about a true gift of love!

    I’m a little jealous that this technology now makes it instantaneous to take a photo, not reserved for a special occasion photo opp. There will be an entire collage of children’s lives now to keep their life’s memories alive.

    But yes, it is more endearing to touch and look at a tangible photograph. Maybe we’ll never remember things in our lives if there is no visual reference to them, but looking at a photograph makes the reason and season when it was taken to have a much stronger impact on is. I think a balance of the two would be a good way to go.

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    1. I think I have a balance; I have my dad’s slides plus the ability to digitize enabling me to see them on my laptop or anywhere I go on my smartphone. Not exactly the same as viewing the slides through a slide projector but it works for me for now.

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  5. I took photography in a journalism class in college. I enjoyed working in the dark room and introduced my mom to it. Soon she installed a dark room in our basement. We were definitely a photo family.

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  6. I love browsing through our old photographs. And just like Elizabeth, I took a class on photography and learned a lot about lighting, angles, shadows, etc. It was so interesting what goes into a stunning photo. Hugs, C

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  7. There’s something so lovely about having the printout on the wall, in a photo frame or in an album. I used to make it a habit to print out photos from time to time and now it’s all stored on my phone and in the cloud – all those life memories with T all captured digitally.

    Something is also lost in the digital age when we have unlimited bandwidth and storage for photos, whereas back then we had to put more thought into the photos we take given there were only so many shots per roll of film!

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  8. Old photos are fun, especially after decades, when we can look at them from a totally different stage of our lives. We notice things we didn’t notice before, and sometimes we remember incidents that happened just before or after the photos. I’m glad I have my old box of photos, and I’m glad my dad made the effort to record our everyday life back then.

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  9. Brian my friend, while digital photos are convenient, hard copy photos are priceless. I have a bunch of old photos and I was recently looking at them, reminiscing about those who are no longer with us. Memories! 🤗📸💖 It is more cumbersome for me to flip through my online photo gallery. Let those photos come alive! 😍

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  10. I love the selectiveness we used to have for our photos. We didn’t take so many and then they really were treasures. But you’re right – now we have more powerful ammunition. 🙂

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