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The 2000s digital camera is cool again. Here’s why : ReadNOW



Digicams have flooded bars and concert venues, festivals and family gatherings. Here’s why.

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A couple of years ago, as summer camps began to ban screens, a company called Camp Snap began to sell a screen-free camera that children could take along. The point-and-shoot had the vibes of a 1990s Kodak: just a viewfinder, a flash and no way to see the photos until the camera was hooked up to a computer.

What the company didn’t see coming was the demand from adults.

“All of a sudden, out of nowhere, a lot of Gen Z, millennial demographic started buying them,” says Camp Snap President Trevor George. “We realized very quickly that, OK, this is way beyond kids at summer camp.”


This photo shows a beige and black Camp Snap camera that is being held by a woman's hands, which have long red-pained fingernails.

Camp Snap made a screen-free camera for kids to take to summer camps, but adults are now nearly just as big an audience.

Camp Snap


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Camp Snap

Perhaps it was only a matter of time after the cool kids put on low-rise jeans like Britney Spears that photo trends would cycle around too. But they come also as a whiplash —against the era of the smartphone.

Digicams have flooded bars, music venues, festivals and family gatherings. Canon told ReadNOW that sales of the PowerShot, its renowned point-and-shoot, jumped nearly sevenfold from 2022 to 2025. Camp Snap says its sales more than doubled in the past year.

Last year, Camp Snap launched a screen-free retro camcorder too, and it showed up in the hands of celebrities including Selena Gomez and Joe Jonas. One was spotted at Taylor Swift’s wedding.

A fresh look in the sea of smartphone photos

Jaden Williams, 16, first picked up a point-and-shoot in his yearbook class. The photos “felt more genuine,” he says. Soon enough, he was noticing digicams all over TikTok and among friends. Last month, he requested — and received — one for his birthday. He uses it alongside his phone.


The photo on the left is a selfie of 16-year-old Jaden Williams. The photo on the right shows the back of his red Canon digital camera, which is displaying a photo of his dog, Chase.

Jaden Williams says these are some of his favorite photos that he has taken with his new digicam lately: a selfie and a sunny snap of his dog, Chase.

Jaden Williams


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Jaden Williams

“If I’m about to take pictures of food or something, then I might use my phone,” says Williams, from North Carolina. “But if I’m out with friends or at a party, I might use the camera for a more, like, warm vibe.”

The turn-of-the-millennium digital photo is hard to mistake: a bit grainy, sometimes fuzzy, overexposed in the center with a blinding flash, often date-stamped in red or orange. A nostalgic haze gives photos the feel of an instant memory.

“The brightness and also the crispness of the photo — but having that blur and grain somehow added in as well — makes the photos look very flattering,” says Katie Coyne, 24, from New York.

She’d bought a digital camera for a safari vacation but lately has lent it to her younger sister, Gwen Coyne, who lives in Philadelphia. They both find the vintage blur refreshing in the sea of hyper-sharp smartphone photos.


The digital camera photo on the left shows palm trees against a blue sky in the Dominican Republic. The middle digital camera photo shows Gwen Coyne wearing a short, strapless white dress and sunglasses. The digital camera photo on the right shows five wine glasses, each with a small amount of wine in it, on a table outdoors, with a hilly South African landscape in the background.

Katie and Gwen Coyne love the wistful, hazy aesthetic of digicam images. These show palm trees in the Dominican Republic, Gwen out with friends and a wine tasting in South Africa.

Katie Coyne


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Katie Coyne

“I feel like iPhone cameras look just so … sometimes it looks a little too real,” says Gwen. She recently brought the digicam on a trip, where she photographed palm trees against the sky and the ocean. “And I don’t really know how to put it into words, but it gave such a vacation vibe.”



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