Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photography. Show all posts

Friday, 2 October 2015

Cute Ways to Capture Your Baby's Growth

cute ways to capture your baby's growth
Sometimes I wish I could freeze time and keep my munchkins small forever. But nothing stays little and cute forever (*sigh*) so I made it a priority to capture my kiddies growing up by taking a monthly photo.

Here are some cute ways to capture your baby's monthly growth:
  1. The easiest way to track growth in pictures is to simply photograph your child with the same object every month. The object could be something meaningful to your family (i.e. sports paraphernalia, something associated with a parent's occupation etc.) or your baby's first stuffie.
  2. A super cute idea is to photograph your baby beside the family pet every month. Guaranteed way to score some adorable pics!
  3. Photograph your child on the same chair or inside the same container (i.e. large basket, bucket, wooden box etc.).
  4. Photograph your child growing into the same initially over-sized shirt/outfit (i.e. a sports jersey of the parent's favourite team).
  5. Buy a large monthly desk-sized calendar and photograph your baby beside or on top of the corresponding month.
  6. Take a picture of your child lying/standing beside those awesome gigantic wooden rulers I have drooled over on pinterest. You can even make your own over-sized ruler if you're feeling really crafty.
  7. One ridiculously cute idea I stumbled upon is to have a clothesline with monthly baby onesies strung up and your baby wearing the corresponding month onesie in the foreground. Sounds confusing...please refer to image below to fully comprehend how adorable this idea is.
    photo from sticky bellies
  8. Turn your baby into a clock! Cut out a large circle out of Bristol board and add in numbers (1-12 just like a clock). Lie your baby down on the clock with their head pointing towards their age in months. Totally wish I had done this one with my kids!
Some fun accessories to add to the monthly photo:
  • chalkboard/wipe-board with the month written on it or if you are feeling super ambitious write down major milestones as well
  • monthly stickers- there are so many cute designs out there in different shapes, sizes and colours! 
  • monthly onesies (or just make your own by pasting number stickers onto plain onesies)
  • baby age blocks (LOVE the ones at chapters/indigo)
  • helium balloons (the number of balloons=age of baby in months)

Tip! Photograph your child in the same spot and background (try to keep it simple) with the same lighting every month. Natural lighting always looks best so open up those drapes and let some sunshine in!

If you want to get really wild, try adding text to the photo using online graphic design software such as picmonkey or canva to document your child's monthly height, weight and significant milestones.
cute ways to capture your baby's growth

At the end of the year put all 12 photos together to create a poster showcasing your baby's growth. Remember to print out extra copies for proud grandparents to show off!
cute ways to capture your baby's growth
 Love watching her grow <3

Do you have any fun ways to track and celebrate your baby's growth? Please share with us below!

Monday, 7 September 2015

Choosing a Professional Family Photographer

choosing a professional photographer
We are pretty excited to feature our first guest post! Okay, it just happens to be one of our husbands who wrote this post and we may have coerced him into doing it! There are so many professional photographers out there and it can be a pretty daunting task searching for the right one to capture your beautiful memories. Here are some useful tips to help you find the right photographer:

I’m asked time and time again to check out a photographer’s website to give my opinion about both the quality and price of their work.  Unfortunately,  with invention of the affordable modern DSLR everyone is now a “photographer”  (See www.youarenotaphotographer.com for a good chuckle).  Finding a good photographer that matches both your style and price range is no easy task.  It takes time and patience!
choosing a professional photographer
Here are a few tips I’ve assembled to help people navigate through the glut of photographers you'll sift through:
I) No website?  Still shooting film? Yikes. Move on.
II) Not all photographers are necessarily children's photographers. Photographing children takes time, patience, improvisation and taking thousands upon thousands of photos to ensure there are at least a few photos where everyone is not tearing each other apart.  If the photographer you are interested in does not have experience shooting children, move on.
III) Ask to see an entire photo shoot.  A lot of photographers will only display their best work of one or two photos from every shoot.  You should probably ask yourself, “What do the other photos look like?”  Anyone can get lucky with a few photos.  If the photographer will not show you an entire shoot, move on.
IV) Your photos are your photos!  Don’t pay twice.  It still vexes me as to why photographers ask you to pay to print your photos after you have already paid for them once…well actually, I know the answer: they want to squeeze more money out of you.  Photographers like to sell you prints at egregious markups by telling you their prints are superior in quality to the ones you print yourself.  This is not true.  I will not use or suggest a photographer to anyone unless they give their clients full resolution digital copies of their photos.  Repeat after me,  “I would like full resolution digital copies of my photos on a DVD”.  Negotiate this before you agree to sign-up for anything.  If they insist that you must buy your photos from them (the photos you already paid for once!), move on!
V)  The photographer you talk to should be the photographer that photographs you.  In the age of unpaid interns, the photography profession is no exception.  You are not paying top dollar (and painfully getting your kids ready for hours) for a student to show up at your house with a Canon Rebel and a pop-up flash (no offense intended, Canon Rebels are good cameras for enthusiasts).  Photography takes hundreds of hours of practice and thousands of dollars worth of equipment.  Ask your photographer,  “Will you be the one photographing us?”  If not, move on!
choosing a professional photographer
Chances are you are only going to have professional photos of your children done a handful of times in your life, so don't settle for anything but the best!
choosing a professional photographer
We hope these tips help you narrow down your choices and help you capture those priceless memories of your little ones!  If you have any other tips, feel free to share them below! 

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