In 2000, when I was a junior at Princeton University, I took a series of photographic portraits of my 20-year-old classmates. Back then, the
Internet existed, but we still did research by reading books we checked out from the library. Only a few of us had cell phones, and they didn't work on campus. I photographed my peers with a medium-format film camera, and printed the negatives in a darkroom using an enlarger.
Seventeen years later, during our 15th college reunion, I re-photographed the same set of classmates, this time using a digital camera. I also asked my classmates about what has happened in their lives and how the expectations they had when they were 20 have or haven't aligned with reality.