Going on vacation implies wanting to save each memory or place visited with a photograph to be able to relive what has been lived at any time. This is why a couple chose to buy a camera at a fair and by showing the images of their vacations on Twitter, the other users went crazy.
The young woman, @mxrrria as she is known on the social network, released some of the photos she took with her boyfriend on her days of rest and enjoyment. “We bought a little analog camera at a fair for $1,500 before we went on vacation and said, ‘That’s it, we’ll take a chance and see if anything comes of it,’” she recounted.
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“Look at the photos we took,” added María, who also attached a series of photos of different landscapes and of both of them posing in front of them.
The post went viral, reaching 24.5 thousand likes, 398 quoted tweets, and 239 retweets. In addition, many people, delighted with the final result of the photos, added their comments about it.
“Aaaaaaa, never the protagonist, always a spectator,” added one user. “They are beautiful,” exclaimed another. “How cute”, was another comment.
Photo: Twitter / @mxrrria
Photo: Twitter / @mxrrria
Photo: Twitter / @mxrrria.
Generation Z is making their parents’ digital cameras fashionable again: “They are turning the clock back to 2007”
Last spring, Anthony Tabarez celebrated his graduation like many of today’s high school students, dancing the night away and capturing it in photos and video. The footage shows the 18-year-old Tabarez and his friends smiling, jumping up and down and waving their arms from a crowded dance floor.
Instead of using her smartphone, however, Tabarez documented prom night with an Olympus FE-230, a silver 7.1-megapixel digital camera made in 2007 that belonged to her mother. During his senior year of high school, cameras like that began showing up in classrooms and at social gatherings. On graduation night, Tabarez passed her camera to her classmates, with which they captured fuchsia-tinted photos that looked like they were taken at the turn of the millennium.
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Tabarez, now a freshman at California State University, Northridge, commented: “We are so used to our cell phones. When you have something else to take pictures with, it’s more exciting.”