Photo Booth with White Backdrop Inside Separk Mansion

Dow Oak Events | DJs | Photo Booths | Lighting

At Separk Mansion on May 29, the photo booth sat quietly in the back room, white backdrop smooth as a fresh sheet. Someone had parked a plate of lemon bars on the radiator, and a napkin with a smear of frosting clung to the edge of the stand.

It took a minute for people to realize it was a social booth. No prints. No attendant. Just a bright screen with a start button and a little circle that counted down. We were in Gastonia, NC, but in that corner we might as well have been in a small studio someone made up on a dare.

The Booth Line Started Early

Lena poked the screen with one finger, then two, then her whole hand like the pressure would change it. The countdown started, 3, 2, 1, and she blinked so hard we all laughed. She shrugged and hit start again. The first GIF looped with her trying not to blink, which made her blink more.

“Hold on, it moves?”

By then a little cluster had formed. Two cousins side by side, one leaning in too far and cutting his forehead out of every frame. He checked the result, groaned, and pulled everyone back in for a redo, chin tucked this time. People figured out the rhythm. Tap, pose, check, send. Phones lit up in the room as links came through. A hiccup with the signal had half of us waving our screens near the window like that would help.

There was a soft spot of cake icing on the lens somehow. Maybe from the lemon bars, maybe from a kid I never saw. I wiped it with the corner of my sleeve while two bridesmaids adjusted their earrings in the black reflection of the screen and tried to look like they had not sprinted over.

That One GIF

Sabrina drifted in with James tucked just behind, the train of her dress gathered in her hand. He had a strawberry on a toothpick from a tray somewhere. He held it up like a joke while the countdown started. 3. He raised his eyebrows. 2. He tossed the strawberry at his mouth and missed. 1. It bounced off Sabrina’s shoulder and left the faintest red dot on his white shirt.

We all gasped. He kept laughing even as he checked the screen, then bent close and tried to blot the spot with the back of his knuckle. The GIF looped the whole thing. Bounce, blink, laugh. Over and over. Sabrina squinted at the tiny red mark, then kissed her fingertips and tapped it like a stamp, which only made it funnier. They did one more where she held the toothpick like a prize and James pretended to duck, then he tucked the toothpick behind his ear and left it there far too long.

That clip made a quiet lap through the room. Phones passed. People sidled back for their own fruit toss attempts with grapes and almonds that rolled off hands and down shirts. Nothing hit the way James’s did, which became the joke. A small girl in silver shoes tried with a piece of bread and it just stuck to her cheek. She was thrilled.

One More Round Near the Back Room

After a while, folks started returning. The cousins came back to do a serious one, arms crossed, then ruined it with a snort and a shoulder bump that knocked them both out of frame. An uncle who had avoided the whole thing earlier slid in with two aunts and asked me, very softly, where the camera actually was. We aimed him at the little black dot, and he nodded like he was making a promise to it.

Sabrina’s mom came back with a small group holding programs like fans. The screen’s reflection showed them smoothing hair and checking lipstick in a line. They went twice. The first time they looked polite. The second time they leaned all the way in and whooped at the replay like they were sneaking candy.

Before I left the room, I saw the lemon bars were gone and the napkin had migrated to the base of the stand. The white backdrop had a wrinkle near the bottom where someone’s heel had backed into it. The screen lit up again on its own countdown, catching the edge of a hand reaching in. Three. Two. One.

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