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March 30, 2026

The Jazz Age in Strips: 35 Candid Photobooth Portraits of Young Women From the 1920s

In the 1920s, the invention of the automated photobooth by Anatol Josepho revolutionized how people captured their own likeness, offering a rare, uncurated glimpse into the lives of young women. These photobooth portraits are a stark departure from the stiff, formal studio photography of the Victorian era. Inside the tiny, curtained booths, young women of the “Jazz Age” felt free to experiment with their newfound liberation.

Captured in a series of grainy, high-contrast frames, these images often show the iconic flapper aesthetic: bobbed hair tucked under cloche hats, dark kohl-rimmed eyes, and bold “cupid’s bow” lips. But beyond the fashion, there is a sense of playful intimacy.

You see friends huddled together, flashing rebellious smiles, or a solitary woman offering a candid, soulful gaze to the lens. They are more than just photos, they are visual diaries of a generation that was bold, spirited, and determined to define themselves on their own terms.



































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