At a time when startup hustle culture is back, when โlocked inโ tech founders have even embraced the โ996โ way of working โ 9 am to 9 pm, 6 days a week โ there is something dystopian about using an AI app to generate fake vacation photos of yourself.
And yet, here we are.
Product designer Laurent Del Rey, who recently joined Metaโs Superintelligence Lab, launched a side project called Endless Summer, a photobooth app for iPhone that creates AI-generated vacation photos starring you in locations around the world. Here you are exploring a beach town, or overlooking a European city from your balcony. There you are, out shopping, having dinner with friends, or at a social gathering.
It doesnโt look like anyone in these photos is talking about AI or entrepreneurship or a lack of sleep.
As Del Rey explained when sharing the launch on X, the new app is for when โburnout hits and you need to manifest the soft life u deserve.โ
(When you canโt live life, you may as well fake it, right?)
The product designer told TechCrunch that he was inspired to create the app because summer is his favorite season, and he loves how life feels during that time of the year.
โAs the season ends, I wanted to make something that felt like that. Itโs from that feeling that I reverse-engineered the product experience,โ he says. โI created an Xcode project and started iterating directly from there, sculpting the code experience, so to speak.โ
The experience he landed on was a simple user interface where thereโs a tiny camera preview button at the bottom of the screen. You tap the button to make an AI-generated โsummerโ photo. As you click, the photos appear on your screen, in a sort of camera roll-style view. Each photo features you, or rather an AI version of you, exploring the world and looking fairly content while doing so.
Behind the scenes, Geminiโs Nano-Banana image-model is doing the heavy lifting, as the app prompts the model for different variations of the summer photo output.

The app isnโt saving your selfies, Del Rey says, unless you have its optional auto-generation mode enabled. Plus, users can delete their account at any time with just two taps, which erases everything.
While Nano-Banana is relatively cheap, it does cost money. For that reason, you canโt generate unlimited photos for free with Endless Summer. Instead, youโll hit a paywall after your first six images, with a prompt suggesting payment options even before then.
The pricing isnโt too bad if youโre looking to just dabble with the personalized AI imagery out of curiosity โ or because youโre lamenting having missed your summer vacay this year.
Itโs $3.99 to make 30 images, $17.99 for 150, and $34.99 for 300. You can enable or disable a โRoom Serviceโ mode that auto-delivers two photos to you every morning, featuring your latest summer escapades and world travels. You can also set your gender in the app or leave it to guess (โAutoโ mode), and turn on or off an option that auto-saves the AI images to your iPhoneโs Camera Roll.
A recent option in the app lets you generate Halloween photos instead of summer photos, featuring you in different costumes.
The photos themselves have a vintage film aesthetic, which makes them look like the casual lifestyle pics theyโre supposed to resemble. That brings a sense of nostalgia to the app, as it evokes a mid-2000s feel.
This reflects other modern trends around online photo sharing. Whether thatโs adopting retro technology, like zoomers carrying disposable cameras, or posting Instagram photo dumps of blurry pics, thereโs a desire among some for a less-curated, less โtechnically perfectโ version of life.
How bizarre is it that itโs AI bringing that to you now?