This creepy AI tool lets you animate your ancestors
Deepfake your loved ones.
There's good news if you've wondered what your great-great-grandmother looked like when pulling a frown, or how much cheerier Victorian-era photos would look if their subjects actually cracked a smile. A new deepfake tool from ancestry site MyHeritage, aptly called Deep Nostalgia, is here to satisfy your creepy needs.
The tool, which you can play about with on the brand's website, adds moving expressions to photos from a template of pre-recorded facial movements, finding the best one for the photo uploaded. That the service is absolutely free provides great marketing for My Heritage, although for any photographic creatives out there you'd probably be better off with our guide to the best photo-editing software.
Deep Nostalgia isn't just for family photos either (try it here). Users have created GIF-like work encompassing legends of history, famous artworks, and absurdly creepy faces from the meme-o-sphere.
My contribution to the myheritage #deepnostalgia posts. pic.twitter.com/ejORicofb1February 28, 2021
If you're more creeped out by privacy issues, then rest assured that MyHeritage will automatically delete any photos you upload. The maximum you can upload with the Deep Nostalgia tool is five, and note that it only works with faces, meaning you won't be able to make Bernie Sanders do the Floss or whatever.
Regardless, that should be more than enough if you're looking to edit photos of you and your current partner where one of you looks happier than the other, or if you want to rustle up a few scary deepfakes like these terrifying Tom Cruise TikToks.
Read more:
- These are the only non-golden McDonald's arches in the world
- 12 deepfake examples that terrified and amused the internet
- The 8 best free photo editors
Get the Creative Bloq Newsletter
Daily design news, reviews, how-tos and more, as picked by the editors.
Thank you for reading 5 articles this month* Join now for unlimited access
Enjoy your first month for just £1 / $1 / €1
*Read 5 free articles per month without a subscription
Join now for unlimited access
Try first month for just £1 / $1 / €1
Giacomo is a writer and talking head who has covered creativity and creative tools for Wallpaper*, Digital Arts, Creative Boom, VICE, Little White Lies, the BBC and more. Giacomo has also hosted for Adobe and D&AD, and judged the annual New Blood Awards. He was deputy editor of Creative Bloq for a short time in 2021.
Related articles
- Elden Ring locations recreated in Minecraft are stunningly detailed
- Netflix's Squid Game video game surprises with its cartoon art style
- League of Legends developer Riot Games unveils punchy new visual identity
- Alien: Rogue Incursion's terrifying Xenomorphs are a “happy accident” reveals the game's art director