Posts Tagged ‘baby photography’

August is National Breastfeeding Month (and August 1-7 is World Breastfeeding Week for a double helping) and because I do a lot of breastfeeding portraits, both as portraits and in my personal, more arty, work, and because I haven’t had a blog contest in a while it’s time to have one.

I will use the wonders of random.org, which generates a number random enough to suit (we’ll not get into the vagaries of getting a truly random number) to give away one of my breastfeeding board books including shipping as long as I’m only shipping within the continental United States. Live far away and win? You can either have me ship it to a friend in the continental US or I’ll find out the actual shipping cost for you. There will also be some runners up, who will get breastfeeding magnets.

How do you enter, you ask? So easy.

* 1 entry per comment on this post (1 comment per person, please)
* 1 entry per link back, not counting tweets (as many link backs as you’d like, as long as they come from different URLs)
* 1 entry per tweet with a link

I’ll close comments on August 31st, post the big winner, and email all the winners to get their addresses. Voila. I said it was easy.

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And VOILA. Having harassed asked people to tell me which were their favorite of my breastfeeding images I present the finished poster. I’ll be doing a final proofreading tomorrow to avoid embarrassing typos.

How embarrassing? I brought a stack of free postcards to the La Leche League conference in April touting the wonders of breasfeeding. I’d like to avoid that this time.

Breastfeeding Portraits in Connecticut

SO I’ll be doing a final proofread then send the file out to the printer. I’ll be giving them out to local breastfeeding professionals. If you are not local to me, or not a person with a business and office space that deals with lactating breasts, you can print the PDF or you can give me $10, roughly the printing and mailing cost, and I’ll send you one.

Downloadable PDF:
Please note that this is made freely available for you to print and distribute at will and am trusting in the basic goodness of people to use it as intended. Please respect that I retain copyright to these images and do not use them individually on your web site or in your materials even for the very best of causes. If you make the download available on your on web site please do it by linking back to this, original, post.

This file is very large so that you can make a very good print – you should be able to send this to a professional printer if you desire and have no issues with resolution, or just print it on the laser printer!

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Now and again things happen at photography sessions that make one laugh, though usually not until a bit later after a glass of wine or two. A small sampling…

  1. I was doing a very casual portfolio building shoot of a friend’s 3-month old son at my house on my back deck. She took her glasses off to get some pictures holding her child without the specs and my own child grabbed her glasses, broke them, and dropped them under the deck. We had to fish them out (or rather, I did, as she really is basically blind without her glasses) using a hook AFTER we located where they were by peering through the wooden boards at the assorted dead leaves below. Finding patterned brown glasses in dead leaves with almost no light is, well, interesting. I told her to let me pay for new ones. Did she? No. They are STILL taped together and that boy is 18 months old now. Every time I see them I feel glasses-guilt. Lesson learned: don’t ever try to do even the most casual shoot with your kids around. This just doesn’t end well.
  2. I did a maternity session for one woman and was doing a set of rapid fire pictures, one after another, of the same pose. When I went back to proof the pictures, as I flipped from one to the next, I realized I could see the baby shifting around inside her womb and causing her abdomen to change shape. I’ve also had a woman have contractions during the shoot; she was a trooper and hiked all over West Hartford Center – in high heeled boots – pausing only briefly during contractions. She admitted she hoped the walking would bring on full labor. No such luck. I did, however, once have a mother go into full labor about 5 hours after our session.
  3. Babies pee on my ALL THE TIME. It’s just part of the job and one reason I wear very casual clothes to shoots. Only once, however, did I manage to actually catch an arc of pee in the air when I pushed the shutter RIGHT as the baby peed. If this happens to you I will add a complimentary 4X6 of that shot for you to tuck away until your child’s wedding rehearsal dinner when you can add it to the slideshow of cute childhood pictures. This will be payback for the sleep deprivation.
  4. At a wedding I once, camera gear hanging from my neck, jumped down a river bank to grab a blow-away ketubah that the wind had snatched and was attempting to introduce to the water, not 15 minutes after every single person in the family had signed it. This was not in the fine print of “How to be a wedding photographer.” I’ve also helped a bride into her dress, which eliminated any sweet “the bride getting dressed” shots but ensured that she actually DID get zipped into her dress.

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I just got back from Toronto. I love Toronto; it’s where I went to graduate school and got my degree in Medieval Studies, which is quite possibly the least useful degree available, though the fun one can have playing Latin Scrabble should not be underestimated. Or over-estimated, as the case may be. This time I went to go spend a weekend at a workshop with the talented and chic Heather Rivlin and talk about newborns and the taking pictures of such.

It was kind of like being 29 again. There I was, traveling, just me, the passport, a credit card, a camera and a backpack. No kids. No 15 juice boxes. No piles of Things Designed to Keep Preschoolers From Kicking the Seat in Front of Them (TM). So, I show up in my favorite city, all cool and kid free, as a giant pimple blossoms on the side of my face.

Did I say it was like 29? Make that more like 14. Really. It was, and is, so absurdly gargantuannly huge Brian asked over dinner if I had been bitten by a mosquito. Sigh. And, I did tell you Heather was chic right? And her studio was chic. And I, I was not, shall we say, chic.

Then, there I was in this fabulously cool city and at the end of each day working I was so darn tired the idea of strolling down to ANYTHING other than to collapse in my hotel room was just an exhausting proposition. So I didn’t. Because that is how cool and fun I am.

I did do a little shooting, and a lot of note taking. The nature of a newborn workshop is that the teacher does all the baby posing as, after all, so very very few parents of newborns are all that happy with the idea of 10 strangers arranging their baby. I joke that “all I do is point the camera and push the button” but in this case it’s really quite true as the posing part is the most difficult part of newborn photography. However, this little guy, at all of three days old, is really too cute not to share.

And, my standard baby reminder: if you want newborn pictures BOOK EARLY. I will shoot “Simply Babies” style pictures up through 1 month of age but if you really want newborn shots the baby has to be under 10 days. That 3-10 day old window is the best time. Book while you are pregnant.

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This sweetie is one of my Year in the Life babies. She started out small and now, well, see for yourself.

Baby Girl Looking at a Horse

Little Girl in Park by Connecticut Baby Photographer Stacie Turner

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Let’s face it, there are only so many pictures you can hang on the wall and put in frames on shelves. But there you are, faced with a gallery of 30+ images going “OK, so one for my desk, and one for your desk, and one for my mother and… but I want them ALL!”

One of my favorite ways to have them all is the image box. What, you ask, is an “image box”? Well, it’s a box. Oh, you’d figured that part? It has one of the prints from your session on the front and more prints inside. Kind of like this:

Get all your images in an Image Box

Pictures in an Image Box from Stacie Turner Photography

The prints can be mounted on archival matboard so you can display one at a time on an easel.

Stacie Turner Photography offers images mounted on archival matboard

If you decide on mounted images you are limited as to how many you can have as, well, it is unlikely that all the images from your session would FIT in a box once they were mounted. If you want regular, unmounted prints you get them all because, quite simply, they’ll all fit.

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With the most unique comments in the month of April, Sweet Little Girl won the voting contest. Please pick one of these for your mounted 11X14 wall portrait.

Smiling Baby by Stacie Turner Photography Simply Babies

Connecticut Newborn Portraits

Our VERY CLOSE runner up, who had more total votes but fewer in the month of April, was Itty Bitty Sleepy Girl. I’ll send you a surprise runner up prize (I mean, you were SO close) so watch the mail for a package later this month!

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This was such a fun conference to display at. This is actually the second year I’ve had a table in the Hall of Exhibitors (which sounds a bit more impressive than it actually was) and I had a blast. There were cute babies and toddlers everywhere, it’s a crowd that likes a baby picture and I got to talk to so many fascinating people, give out breastfeeding advocacy magnets with one of my breastfeeding portraits on it to nurses, doctors and WIC personnel and show off my newborn portraits and children’s portraiture to everybody.

My display:
Cute Reasons You Should Book a Portraiture Session Now

Some other exhibitors. Click on their snapshots to go visit their web sites. All are fabulous women who had some great things out for sale. I must have one of Herrickfield Designs felted bags and if I ever have another baby (hah) I will be getting Bean Tree Baby to set me up with a wardrobe of carriers to get me through.


Sarah Herrick of Herrickfield Designs Needle Felting

Bean Tree Baby at the La Leche League Conference

Erica and Keith Grossman, Bradley Childbirth Educators in Manchester, CT

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Well, she is. If it’s any consolation she’s cuter than I am as well.

I photographed this little beauty on Saturday morning. She was right in the middle of her 3-week growth spurt and made me work for it but time, patience, lots of food, womb sounds and loud shushing resulted in some final sleeping images that are just adorable as well as some great looks of wide eyed wonder.

Newborn Portraits in Connecticut

baby portraits in CT

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As you may know I did a slew of Fresh Faces shoots in February and March. It is, after all, the slow season here in the frozen northeast and what better time to add some new babies to the portfolio and try out a few new poses? And the mothers were all such good sports, bringing me their babies to photography when they weren’t even two weeks old yet! Each model got a free session and an 8X10 of their choice (or their mother’s choice – so few newborns really have an opinion on their portraits yet.) BUT, they were all so adorable and delightful I wanted to share them all with you and thought – hey! I haven’t had a contest in a while.

So.. here’s the rules:

  • Vote for one baby via the comments on the original blog post (not Facebook – trying to keep track of two voting areas would make me battier than I already am).
  • One vote per person, please.
  • All votes/comments have to be placed in April to count.
  • Voting closes on April 30th, 2010

The baby with the most votes wins a mounted 11X14 of the image in his or her blog post; if there are multiple images in the post the parents can choose which one they want. AND one random commenter on the winning baby will get a $25 gift certificate. Go forth and solicit votes from parenting boards, Facebook, family, friends, coworkers and total strangers on the streets.

Though I hope people will play fair I am not going to try to figure out if the same person has used 10 different emails and 10 different names to stuff the ballot box. You’re on the Honor System.

Here’s a quick listing of all the babes:

Baby in a Hat
Baby in a Sling
A Boy and His Mother
Sleepy Girl
Wide Awake Boy
Itty Bitty Girl
Sweet Little One
9 Baby Faces
Sleeping Girl
Baby C

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