9 classic hobbies boomers loved that young people are bringing back

October 19, 2025

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Life has a funny way of circling back. What once seemed old-fashionedโ€”knitting, birdwatching, working with your handsโ€”was left behind in the rush toward smartphones, streaming, and TikTok. But now ? Somethingโ€™s shifting.

Young people are rediscovering the very hobbies many of us baby boomers grew up with. And honestly, it feels like the world needed this return. Here are some timeless pastimes making a comeback, each carrying its own quiet joy.

Vinyl record collecting

I can still remember stepping into a record store with five dollars and leaving with an album Iโ€™d play until the grooves wore thin. Then came CDs. Then downloads. Then streaming.

But today ? Vinyl records are back in style. Young collectors are buying turntables, digging through flea market crates, and paying big money for albums I bought in 1972 for pocket change. And I get itโ€”thereโ€™s nothing like the sound of a needle hitting vinyl. It forces you to slow down, sit, and truly listen.

The revival of gardening

Back then, nearly every household had a garden. Tomatoes, lettuce, sunflowersโ€”it wasnโ€™t trendy, it was simply how we lived. Fresh food came from the soil in your own backyard.

Now itโ€™s called urban farming, with social media full of herb pots and raised beds. But Iโ€™m not complaining. Watching something grow from your own hands is one of lifeโ€™s most satisfying feelings. I still get that same spark every time I see the first tomato of the season ripen.

ย The power of handwritten journals

Before smartphones, we had journals. Scraps of paper. Notebooks stuffed under pillows. Pages filled with teenage worries, young love, and wild dreams.

Iโ€™ve still got a box of old journals in my atticโ€”part embarrassment, part treasure. And today, I see younger generations rediscovering the therapy of handwriting. Theyโ€™re buying leather-bound journals and fancy pens, realizing what we always knew: sometimes, the best medicine is a blank page.

Knitting and crochet return

My grandmother taught me to knit when I was young. I wasnโ€™t very good at it, but Iโ€™ll never forget the calm it gave her : hands in motion, mind at peace.

For a while, it looked like this kind of craft was fading. But now, I see people in their twenties knitting scarves on park benches and swapping patterns on Instagram. Knitting and crochet arenโ€™t just about making something cozyโ€”theyโ€™re about slowing down, working with your hands, and finding joy in the rhythm.

Fishing as a quiet escape

When I was a teenager, Saturday mornings meant fishing. Weโ€™d pack a sandwich, grab our gear, and head to the lake before sunrise. For a while, I thought that tradition was lost.

But fishing is back. Some cast lines for sport, others for the peace of it, and plenty just for the photos. Whatever the reason, the magic remains. Watching a bobber dance on the water will always beat scrolling horror movies late at night.

Cooking from scratch

My mom never measured a thing. She used old coffee cups and her hands, and somehow her biscuits always came out perfect. We grew up with homemade bread, pies with real crust, and cakes that never saw a box mix.

For years, convenience ruled the kitchen. But now I see people grinding their own flour, fermenting sourdough, and proudly posting their lopsided banana bread. Cooking from scratch isnโ€™t about perfectionโ€”itโ€™s about reconnecting with something real.

The art of letter writing

Before email and texts, we wrote letters. Real letters. Paper, stamps, envelopes delivered by hand.

Thereโ€™s something timeless about opening a handwritten envelope. Itโ€™s personal, intentional. Believe it or not, letter writing is coming back. Pen pal clubs, calligraphy workshops, even subscription services that deliver hand-penned notes. To me, itโ€™s a beautiful return. A letter may take longer to arrive, but it lingers far longer in the heart.

Woodworking and legacy

My dad had a workbench in the garage. It smelled of sawdust, turpentine, and patience. He built shelves, fixed chairs, and carved toys when money was tight.

Today, woodworking is trending again. People are making cutting boards, building desks, and taking pride in techniques that havenโ€™t changed in a hundred years. Itโ€™s not about being handyโ€”itโ€™s about creating something that outlives you.

A few days later, my grandson sat in that chair and said, โ€œThis is pretty cool.โ€ I just smiled. That chair may wobble a bit, but it carries three generations of stories. Thatโ€™s what woodworking really is. Not furnitureโ€”heritage.

Puzzles and board games

There was a time when family fun meant gathering around the table with Monopoly, Clue, or Scrabble. For years, those boxes collected dust as video games and streaming took over.

But now, board games are back in a big way. Not just the classicsโ€”new strategy games, co-op challenges, and giant puzzles that bring every generation together. Turns out, thereโ€™s still magic in sitting face-to-face, rolling dice, and laughing across a table.

What about you ? Have you noticed younger friends or family picking up hobbies you once thought were gone for good? Iโ€™d love to hear your storiesโ€”drop a comment, share this with someone nostalgic, or tell us which pastime youโ€™d like to see make its comeback next. After all, some things are too good to stay forgotten.

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Nicolas Menier

Nicolas Menier is a passionate journalist and editor at PhilaPlace, where he explores stories that connect people, history, and urban culture. With a background in social sciences and digital media, Nicolas focuses on how neighborhoods evolve, how communities preserve their identity, and how local stories shape a cityโ€™s collective memory. His writing blends curiosity, empathy, and a love for uncovering the hidden details that make everyday life in Philadelphia truly remarkable.

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