"How you did that?"īut it's Anand's mother that makes us all cry, with the look on her face and her gasp as she realises her mother moved on the tiny phone screen. "Oh my god," his dad says, taking the phone. The on-screen caption says, "Showing my parents, their parents," as Anand shows us the clip before handing it over to his father. "Love and cherish your parents," Anand wrote in the caption.
Add or scan your photo to the MyHeritage mobile app: If the photo has not been uploaded to MyHeritage yet, you can add it by visiting the My photos section of the app and tapping the orange plus sign on the bottom right. One that stuck out for us was uploaded by TikTok user, Gagandeep Anand. Animate a photo on the MyHeritage mobile app Deep Nostalgia is also available on the free MyHeritage mobile app, which can be downloaded from the App Store or Google Play. Since then it seems the internet has exploded with similar stories, of people breathing life into old photos, bringing back their loved ones in digital form, for one small snippet that has a profound effect.Ī quick scroll through the hashtag, #myheritagechallenge on TikTok will have you in tears as you watch countless others reacting to these videos. The DeepNostalgia feature is powered by tech developed by Israeli tech firm D-ID. "I don't have any video of when he was a baby," she posted alongside the short clip. Genealogy site MyHeritage has unveiled a new AI tool that turns photos of deceased relatives into creepy videos. The second, a mutual friend of ours had animated a photo of when her son was a baby.
In the short clip, his face moved around, his eyes seemed to be looking for someone.
The first time I saw this, a friend had shared a photograph of her father, who passed away when she was a teenager.