In 2014, I experienced Vans Warped Tour as a fan. More than a decade later, I returned as a photographer.
Vans Warped Tour began in 1995 when founder Kevin Lyman created a traveling festival that brought alternative music, punk rock, and skate culture together. Vans became the title sponsor after the festival’s first year, and Warped eventually grew into one of North America’s longest-running touring music festivals. For more than two decades, bands, crews, stages, vendors, and athletes traveled from city to city throughout the summer, giving each location one packed day of music and controlled chaos.
Although Warped Tour became closely associated with punk, pop-punk, emo, metalcore, and ska, its lineups were never limited to one genre. The festival gave emerging artists the opportunity to perform alongside established acts while bringing music, skateboarding, BMX, art, and alternative culture together in one place.
The final full cross-country tour took place in 2018, followed by three special 25th-anniversary events in 2019. After several years away, Warped Tour returned in 2025 to celebrate its 30th anniversary. This time, however, it was reimagined as a series of two-day festivals held in a smaller number of cities rather than a one-day tour traveling across the country. The revived festival returned again in 2026 with an expanded group of select stops.
The format may have changed, but the parts that made Warped Tour feel like Warped Tour remained. There were still packed crowds, overlapping sets, crowd surfers, mosh pits, skate culture, and far too many bands to see in a single weekend. What changed most for me was not only the festival itself, but the role I had within it. In 2014, I attended as a high school student with friends and an old iPhone. In 2026, I returned with professional camera equipment, media access, and the responsibility of documenting the experience from inside the chaos.
These photos were taken by my brother on a point-and-shoot film camera at Warped Tour in Maryland in 2001, when he went to see MxPx perform. Twenty-five years later, MxPx returned to the festival lineup and performed at Warped Tour DC in 2026.
Warped Tour returned with a bigger setup, more amenities, and a two-day format, but the mosh pits, crowd surfers, and familiar chaos never left.
Fewer Stops, Bigger Weekends
Back in the “olden days” of Warped Tour, the festival traveled from coast to coast, hitting around 40 cities over the course of a single summer. Each city received one packed day before the final band finished, the stages came down, and the entire production moved on to its next stop. When Warped Tour returned in 2025, it came back with a very different format. Instead of visiting dozens of cities, the festival is now held over two days in a much smaller number of locations. This year’s stops included Washington, D.C.; Long Beach, California; Montreal, Quebec; Mexico City, Mexico; and Orlando, Florida. The downside is that fewer fans have a Warped Tour stop close to home. The upside is that each selected city receives an entire weekend instead of a single day. The two-day format gives attendees more time to explore the grounds, discover artists they may not have planned to see, and recover from the emotional devastation of two favorite bands performing at the same time. I swear, it took me a week to recover.
Built for Two Full Days: Better Food and Amenities
The revived festival felt better prepared for attendees spending two full days outside. Water-refill stations were easier to find throughout the grounds, while charging options and rental lockers helped people keep their phones alive while checking set times, locating friends, and documenting the weekend.
Food and drink vendors seemed to be around every corner, and the selection felt like an upgrade from the basic festival concessions I remembered. Naturally, festival prices were still festival prices, but I have to give credit where it is due. The vegetable hummus burrito was so good that I bought it both days. It was expensive, but it was absolutely worth it. Out of everything I expected to remember from Warped Tour, including the performances, mosh pits, crowd surfers, and constant effort to protect my camera, I did not expect to become emotionally attached to a festival burrito. Somehow, it earned its place among the weekend’s highlights. There were also cashless payment options and what appeared to be an entire parking lot filled with rows of portable toilets. It was not the most glamorous festival feature, but after hours of walking between stages and drinking enough water to survive the heat, it was definitely appreciated. There were simply more places to refill your water bottle, use the bathroom, charge your phone, and find a decent meal before returning to the chaos. Warped Tour was still hot, loud, crowded, and unpredictable. but these added amenities made the two-day festival more bearable in the heat and manageable without making it feel overly polished.
There were also cashless payment options and what appeared to be an entire parking lot filled with rows of portable toilets. It was not the most glamorous festival feature, but after hours of walking between stages and drinking enough water to survive the heat, it was definitely appreciated. There were simply more places to refill your water bottle, use the bathroom, charge your phone, and find a decent meal before returning to the chaos. Warped Tour was still hot, loud, crowded, and unpredictable. but these added amenities made the two-day festival more bearable in the heat and manageable without making it feel overly polished.
More Than the Music
I do not remember there being a vert ramp at the Maryland stop, so seeing one at the 2026 festival was a major highlight for me. As someone who loves both skateboarding and BMX, I was excited to see action sports occupy such a visible part of the festival. I cannot skateboard for my life, but I love to rollerblade, and learning how to skate is still on my list. Even without much skill of my own, I have always been drawn to the skate community and the creativity, confidence, and support surrounding it. The Vans vert ramp gave me something completely different to photograph between sets. Instead of focusing on stage lights, microphones, and musicians, I was trying to capture skateboarders and BMX riders suspended above the ramp for a fraction of a second. It added another layer of movement to the weekend and resulted in some of my favorite photographs from the festival.
A Festival For More Than One Generation
The crowd felt much more multigenerational than it did when I attended in 2014. Some people were experiencing Warped Tour for the first time, while others were returning after attending during the original touring years. I saw longtime fans bringing their children, younger attendees discovering bands that had been part of the scene for decades, and adults immediately reverting to their teenage selves as soon as a familiar song began.
That mix of generations gave the festival a unique energy. Older fans could revisit the music that shaped their high school and college years, while younger fans experienced those same bands as part of their own story. At the same time, newer artists gave returning attendees the chance to discover what the current alternative scene sounds like. The result felt less like a festival relying only on nostalgia and more like different eras of Warped Tour meeting in the same place.
It was also interesting to see how little some things had changed. People who probably had work on Monday were still jumping, screaming lyrics, crowd surfing, and entering mosh pits as though no time had passed at all. Warped Tour has aged, but so have the people who grew up with it. Some of us still mosh just as hard, even if recovering from it takes a little longer now.
A Bigger Production and Broader Lineup
With fewer cities on the schedule, each Warped Tour stop can operate more like a large destination festival. The D.C. weekend included six stages and more than 100 artists, so there was almost always another performance beginning somewhere on the grounds.
The lineup covered nearly every corner of the alternative music scene. Longtime Warped favorites such as The Story So Far, Yellowcard, Taking Back Sunday, The Used, Hawthorne Heights, Underoath, and Story of the Year appeared alongside heavier acts like Suicide Silence, Sunami, The Devil Wears Prada, and GWAR. More mainstream and radio-friendly names such as Iann Dior, 30H3!, Jimmy Eat World, Third Eye Blind, Plain White T’s, and American Hi-Fi were also included, along with genre-blending artists such as RDGLDGRN. That variety made the festival feel broader than the Warped Tour I remembered. I could spend part of the day photographing pop-punk and emo bands, move to a much heavier set, and then hear something influenced by mainstream rock, pop, or hip-hop. Warped Tour has never belonged to only one genre, but that range felt especially visible in 2026.
It Will Always Be Warped
These additions made the current version of Warped feel more comfortable and expansive without completely losing the chaos that defined the original touring festival. The music remained at the center of the experience, but the vert ramp, action sports, water stations, charging options, food vendors, and other amenities gave attendees more ways to enjoy the weekend between performances. Even with all the changes, Warped Tour has not completely reinvented itself. Many of the same bands that performed ten or fifteen years ago are still taking the stage, now alongside newer artists and a younger generation of fans. The crowds are still loud, the mosh pits still seem to expand without warning, and crowd surfers continue to appear overhead when you least expect them. There is also still the occasional case of festival dehydration, so drink, actually, CHUG your water. Preferably throughout the day, rather than waiting until you feel terrible and downing an entire bottle at once. Some Warped Tour traditions are worth preserving. That one is not. The festival may now last two days and offer more amenities, but its core still feels familiar. It remains sweaty, unpredictable, communal, and slightly chaotic. The format has changed, but the spirit of Warped Tour is still very much alive.
My memories of Warped Tour in 2014 are closely tied to the people I attended with, including a few of my high school friends. The festival was held at Merriweather Post Pavilion in One of those friends was Grace, who returned to Warped Tour with me in 2026 and, by the way, still moshes just as hard. Being there together again felt as though we had slipped right back into our emo days, although I am not sure we ever truly left them. In 2014, I went primarily to see bands I was already listening to, including Of Mice & Men, Falling in Reverse, The Story So Far, The Wonder Years, and Neck Deep, among others. Ronnie Radke, however, is a conversation for another day. One of the biggest surprises was PVRIS, a band I came to love after seeing them perform live. Lynn Gunn’s stage presence was engaging and energizing, and their set became one of the performances that stayed with me long after the festival ended. I remember singing and jamming along while one of my newer friends looked at me looked at me with a mixture of amusement and mild terror. We had met through a mutual friend and were only beginning to spend more time together, so she had not known me long enough to see that side of me yet. It was the side I call “Julie Unleashed.” At the time, I was already taking photos, but not with the same eagerness or intention that I have today. I did not bring a camera beyond an older iPhone, and unfortunately, I do not have many photographs from that year. High school feels like a lifetime ago now, and many of the smaller details have faded with it. That made returning to Warped Tour in 2026 with media access and a photo credential feel even more meaningful. I was grateful not only for the opportunity to photograph the festival professionally, but also for the chance to preserve an experience that had once existed mostly as a fading memory. This time, I could document the performances, the crowd, and all the chaos unfolding around me while still allowing myself to live inside the experience. I was there to work, but I was also still a fan. I sang along, helped hold crowd surfers overhead, and occasionally tried to escape an expanding mosh pit with my camera intact. There was something full circle about returning more than a decade later with professional camera equipment, special access, and a purpose I did not have the first time. In 2014, I left with only a few phone photos and scattered memories. In 2026, not only did "Julie Unleashed" return, but I left with a visual record of the weekend and a deeper appreciation for how photography allows me to experience a moment while also preserving it.
More than a decade after attending as a fan, I returned with a photo credential and a camera in my hands.
Returning to Warped Tour ten years later felt different before I even entered the festival. This time, I was not attending only as a fan but I was there as a photographer and journalist responsible for documenting the performances, the crowd, and the overall experience. I had applied through the official Vans Warped Tour media process and received a photo credential that allowed me to bring professional camera equipment into the festival. Knowing me, I probably would have spent weeks trying to find some other creative way to sneak in a camera anyways, but applying for official access was clearly the better, and much less stressful, route. I was genuinely surprised when my application was approved. At the time, I had only a small amount of concert photography displayed on my website, so receiving the credential felt like someone was taking a chance on me. It was exciting, but it also came with pressure. I wanted to prove that I could work responsibly in a demanding festival environment and return with photographs and observations that captured more than just the artists onstage.
Packing For Chaos
Deciding what equipment to bring became its own challenge. I knew I needed to pack light enough to move comfortably through the festival, but I also wanted to be prepared for almost anything. My instinct was to bring every piece of gear I might possibly need, even though I knew I would regret carrying all of it after several hours in the heat. I was especially hesitant to bring my Nikon Z6III because it was still relatively new. The thought of damaging it in a crowd full of mosh pits, crowd surfers, dust, and unpredictable weather made me nervous. I considered bringing my Nikon D750 instead, but it is bulkier and heavier, which was not ideal for two full days of moving between stages. Eventually, I reminded myself that this was exactly why I had insured my equipment. A camera cannot prove its worth while sitting safely at home, especially when it was made for assignments like this. I told myself I would guard the Z6III with my life, and I pretty much did. At the same time, I was still helping keep crowd surfers from falling and trying to make sure the people around me stayed upright. Somehow, both the camera and the crowd survived.
No Questions Asked, The Film Must Come
Of course, I was going to shoot film at Warped Tour. Kodak Vision3 500T felt especially fitting because it was designed for motion-picture work and could handle the constantly changing lighting conditions of the festival. The wide exposure latitude gave me some flexibility when moving between open daylight, shaded areas, and stages filled with artificial light. Its cinematic color and natural grain also matched the atmosphere I wanted to preserve. I definitely packed some CineStill 800T too. With cloudy weather expected and performances continuing as the daylight faded, I wanted a faster film that would give me more room to work without dropping my shutter speed too far. The removed remjet layer also creates CineStill’s recognizable red glow around bright lights, which felt perfect for photographing stage lighting and the nighttime energy of Warped Tour. Even with both options in my bag, I ended up shooting much more digitally. There were so many moments unfolding at once that I needed to be ready to react quickly. With digital, I did not have to stop in the middle of the action to change rolls, and I had room for a few “oops” photos while adjusting my focus, framing, or exposure before the moment disappeared. Film required me to choose my shots more carefully and slow down, which I definitely needed to do at some points to preserve energy and not pass out from heat exhaustion. Shooting digital was useful because it helped keep up with the speed and unpredictability of the festival. Using both gave me two different records of the weekend. The digital images captured more of the nonstop action, while the film photographs preserved the atmosphere in a way that felt especially personal to me.
Moshing With A Camera Was Not in the Assignment
One thing is certain: the festival kept me on my toes. Moshing with a camera was definitely not part of the assignment, and protecting my gear became one of my main priorities whenever a pit suddenly opened nearby. I enjoyed watching my friends eagerly disappear into the chaos, but I was perfectly happy photographing the action from somewhere my cameras were less likely to be knocked out of my hands. One of the most memorable moments of the day happened during Sleeping With Sirens’ set. I probably should have expected a band that popular to draw such an intense crowd. My friends and I were packed deep near the barricade when the mosh pit began growing around us. As my friends threw themselves into it, I knew it was time for me to make my escape. I tried to skedaddle as quickly as possible while still fulfilling what felt like my duty as a Warped Tour attendee: helping hold up the crowd surfers passing overhead. While supporting other people’s bucket-list decisions, I let my cameras hang from my neck and silently prayed that neither would be punched, kicked, or knocked to the ground. Eventually, the crowd became too chaotic, and protecting both myself and my gear had to take priority. At one point, a man took one look at my camera and the unmistakable panic on my face and yelled, “Camera coming through!” as he helped clear a path through the crowd. Shoutout to that guy. Quickly after, a woman behind me had the same worry on her face so I asked if she was trying to get out. I told her to hold onto the back of my backpack. Before long, several more people had joined the line behind us, each holding onto the other in front. I briefly felt like the Moses of Warped Tour, parting a sea of moshing bodies as we made our way to safety. It was chaotic, exhausting, and strangely communal but it was the kind of moment that captured the festival’s energy.
More Than Pointing a Camera at the Stage
Even with a credential around my neck and a camera in my hands, I never felt completely separate from the crowd. I was there to document the festival as a photographer and journalist, but I was also still a fan. I sang along to the bands I loved, helped hold crowd surfers overhead, and occasionally had to abandon a good shooting position when a mosh pit began expanding in my direction. Photographing Warped Tour required much more than simply pointing my camera toward the stage. I had to remain aware of the crowd, anticipate movement, and protect my equipment while still contributing to the sense of community that makes the festival what it is.
Photographing from inside the crowd also came with a very practical challenge: I am only 5 feet 2 inches tall. When everyone in front of me raised their hands or phones, the performers could disappear from view completely. I often had to search for small openings between people, hold my camera above my head, or wait for the exact moment when the crowd shifted enough to reveal the stage. It made photographing the artists more difficult, but it also pushed me to pay closer attention to movement and find creative angles.
Being surrounded by the audience allowed me to feel the movement around me, hear people shouting lyrics beside me, and see the anticipation on their faces before a favorite song began. Those reactions became just as important to photograph as the musicians onstage. The performances created the energy, but the audience completed the story.
I always wanted to get the photograph, but I also knew when it was more important to lower my camera, help someone stay upright, or move before I became an unwilling participant in the pit. Being a fan helped me recognize the moments that mattered, while being a photographer gave me the opportunity to preserve them.
By the end of the weekend, I realized that carrying a camera had not removed me from the Warped Tour experience. It had simply changed the way I moved through it. I was still singing, sweating, dodging crowd surfers, and trying not to lose my friends, but I was also watching for the brief moments that might disappear once the music stopped. That included fans trading kandi bracelets, something I noticed much more often at Warped Tour in 2026. Those small exchanges added another layer of community to the festival and became part of the story I wanted to preserve.
Some people choose not to take photos because putting the camera away helps them stay present, and I completely understand that. For me, searching for the photograph is part of being present. Watching the light change, anticipating movement, and noticing moments others might overlook is how I experience what is happening around me. Taking photos does not pull me out of the moment. It is how I live inside it.
I am incredibly thankful that Vans Warped Tour gave me the opportunity to return to a festival that meant so much to me and experience it from an entirely new perspective. Receiving a photo credential while I was still building my concert portfolio felt like someone was willing to take a chance on me, and I did not take that trust lightly. The weekend challenged me, strengthened my confidence, and reminded me why I am so drawn to documenting live music and the communities surrounding it.I left Warped Tour with sore feet, a sunburn, full memory cards, a few rolls of film, and an even stronger desire to photograph more concerts and festivals.
From left: Parker Cannon of The Story So Far, Nathaniel Motte of 3OH!3, and iann dior performing at Vans Warped Tour DC 2026.
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