In 1918 — the last time the United States saw a coast-to-coast total solar eclipse — color photography was still a novelty, and many everyday photographers used the Kodak Brownie, an inexpensive camera that shot square images on rolls of film.

Nearly 100 years later, millions of people viewed a total solar eclipse, with many capturing the experience on smartphones and uploading them to the Internet using Instagram, an app that channels the spirit of making pictures with the Brownie.

We took more than 44,000 geolocated Instagram photos uploaded with the #eclipse2017 tag during the eclipse’s route over the United States and grouped them by latitude and longitude. Below, you can see the most popular, or “liked,” image per area.