Social Booth Moments at Summerfield farms Drifted Back to Guests

Dow Oak Events | DJs | Photo Booths | Lighting

At Summerfield Farms on June 13, the printer on the classic photo booth coughed out the first strip before I even set down my cup. The little lights flickered, then the strip curled at the edge like it was shy about being first. Warm and sticky air rolled in from the field. You could feel the heat of Summerfield, North Carolina clinging to everyone’s sleeves.

The Booth Line Started Early

Maya tugged on Evan’s jacket and pushed him toward the curtain. He tried to fix his tie in the black reflection of the screen, missed, and laughed it off. I reached for the feathered headband, then thought better of it because of the wind. The countdown began and someone from behind yelled, too late, to scoot left. We were jammed shoulder to shoulder. The flash popped. We did not scoot.

The printer hummed again. The first strip looked like we had all leaned away at the same time, a crooked row of floating chins. Evan wanted a redo. We stepped back inside, bumped elbows, and finally figured out who would kneel. Kneeling helped. Knees on hay-dusted concrete, also not great for light pants, but worth it.

Across from us, the social booth had a crowd doing boomerangs. A kid in suspenders kept tapping the screen like it was a game. He returned three times in ten minutes, each time with a new prop. At one point he wore the tiny straw hat sideways and held up a blank chalkboard. He didn’t write anything, just held it like a secret sign.

The Veil and the Bubbles

Katherine walked over with her veil draped over one arm, cheeks flushed, eyes a little wet in a good way. She waved us into the booth with her. Someone handed her a bubble wand at the same time, a small plastic one from the welcome table. She laughed, dipped it, and blew a stream that drifted right across the lens as the countdown hit 2.

The flash popped and the lens wore a soapy smile. We knew it right away because the second photo came out in a soft haze, like morning light. Not terrible, just wrong enough to make us all groan. I reached for a cocktail napkin with tiny green ferns printed on it and dabbed the lens. The napkin squeaked. It made a small wet circle and left a faint smear anyway. We tried again and the next set was crisp enough. Later, Katherine tucked the hazy strip into her bouquet like a joke. She kept it there for an hour.

While we were cleaning up the bubble incident, a gust caught the veil and tugged it toward the curtain rod. For a second it snagged on a little screw head and nobody moved, like we were afraid to breathe. Evan reached up with both hands, palms open, and lifted it free. He stepped back slowly, hands still out, like a catcher with a firefly in his grip.

People kept lining up. The cousins ran a relay between the classic booth and the social booth, trading a velvet bow tie and oversized glasses. Each return got louder. One aunt tried to straighten a prop mustache, then gave up and wore it at a slant. Her laugh carried.

“Wait, do that one again.”

Grandpa wandered into the social booth, squinting. He asked where to look. I pointed at the tiny green dot next to the lens. He nodded, very serious, and then leaned in so close his nose took up half the frame. The print came out and he held it at arm’s length, confused for a beat, then started calling it modern art.

One More Round of Photos

Near sunset the line eased, but it never disappeared. The sky went the color of peach candy behind the barn roof. I saw the kid in suspenders again, now without the hat, holding the chalkboard still blank. He stepped into the booth with his mom and finally drew a tiny heart in the corner right before the click. Barely visible. He shrugged like that was enough.

Katherine walked by once more, veil now looped over her arm, sandals in her other hand. She paused at the printer and waited for a strip to slide out. When it did, she lifted it close to her face, squinted at the bubble-haze one mixed into the stack, and grinned at me. I tapped the corner. She tucked it into her pocket and kept moving, veil trailing behind like a line drawn in chalk.

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