After photographing Camden and Colson I was excited to finally get my hands on a little girl. Little Miss Molly's grandmother came to my classroom one day and asked if I'd be interested in taking pictures of her granddaughter when she made her arrival. Without hesitation I agreed. Ahhh, a girl! And of course my mind ran wild- bows, scarves, flowers....
On the day of Molly's session I managed to talk my husband, Brandon, into joining me. Did I have ulterior motives for inviting him to a newborn GIRL session? No, not me- I'd never do something manipulative like that ;) Brandon was such a great help. He unloaded all my props and helped me get everything set up. During the session he took pictures of me in action which I have included below Molly's pictures. I was thankful to have him by my side. I must admit, he's a pretty good teammate.
Little Molly is absolutely precious. Courtney and James- congratulations on your beautiful addition and thank you for allowing me to capture such a special time in your lives.
Behind The Scenes:
I've been wanting to include some BTS photos of a newborn session for a while now. I think it gives people a better idea of what my sessions look like. If you notice in the photo below, I have set everything up right in front of the back door in the kitchen. This location was the brightest spot in the house and worked perfectly. We moved the dining room table back and set up the props. In this picture you can see that I'm using my handy dandy bean bag and a chair to hold the heater. I'm trying to sooth Molly and get her comfortable. I'm very close to her so she feels secure. I have positioned Molly for an overview photograph here.
In the photo below I am in the middle of transitioning Molly to a different position/setting. Often times when you move them they wake up. All it takes is a little heat and snuggling and they are right back to sleep (yes, I was falling in love at that very moment). In this photo I was warming her up before I swaddled her. My cardigan ended up being quite useful.
Below you can see that she's already been swaddled and put into position. You may wonder why I'm holding my camera like that. As strange as it looks, using my left hand in that way serves as a stabilizer for me. I usually only do that when I feel shaky or I'm seeing that my images aren't as crisp as I want.
In this photo I am trying to get Molly to relax. Sometimes when you put them in an awkward position such as this one they want to fight it a little. By placing my hand on her back gently, but firmly, she feels secure. Notice the paper towel roll in the chair- I bet you can figure out what that's for ;)
I'm going to end with the photo below. In this picture you can see that I'm going for the "head on hands" pose- by far the hardest. I always do this one last because it usually ends up waking the baby due to having to move them so much. This pose is EXTREMELY difficult to get. Why? The baby has to be very sound asleep otherwise all the movement will wake them. I wasn't able to capture this pose with Molly, but I tried. In this photo you can see that I've got her feet supporting her elbows and I'm holding her wrists and head (very securely). I almost had it- just couldn't get her balanced just right. It helps having someone there to help hold the baby's head.
2 comments:
This is great! I love when photographer share their behind the scene shots!!
this is really cool to see how it is done! I always thought you just snapped away, never thought they were positioned like that!
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