My sweet little sister, Laura graduated this year and I was so excited to take her senior pictures. She is amazing and I cannot wait to see what the Lord has in store for her life.

I photographed the same extended family twice.
The first time, it rained. They were troopers about it. We had already scoped out a covered porch at the location just in case the weather had other ideas, and that porch became our backdrop. We made something beautiful out of what could have been a wash.
The second time, they came back with new additions. Beach house on Alligator Point. Grandparents out on the water with the grandchildren. Big group moments and smaller family units. Easy, relaxed, and real.
What I remember most about both sessions is the feeling at the end. A kind of collective exhale. Like everyone knew they had just done something that mattered and would keep mattering long after that day.
That is the thing about showing up even when the conditions are not perfect. The photos do not know it rained.
Read more about Extended family/Multigenerational family photos in this month`s blog post. Link in bio.
If you have been sitting on this and are not quite sure yet, I want to make it simple.
This is a short session. It is designed to be low-pressure, low-chaos (or at least managed chaos), and genuinely doable for real families with real kids.
You do not need to have it all together. You do not need perfectly behaved children or a color-coordinated wardrobe already sorted. I will send you a guide. I will handle the rest.
It is five to seven minutes. We will get photos you actually love. I mean that.
Details and booking are at the link in bio.
Five Spots. One Date. A setting that only looks like this for about three weeks out of the year.
I am not trying to manufacture urgency here. The blooms genuinely do not wait, and the calendar genuinely does not have room for everyone who wants a session this spring.
If your family has been on your to-do list for a while, now is a really good time to actually do something about it.
April 11 at Maclay Gardens. $275. A wardrobe guide, a focused session, and your images delivered in two weeks.
Link to book in bio.
After you see your gallery, you might want more than three images.
That is a completely normal thing to feel, and I want you to know the option exists before you are standing there wishing you had decided sooner.
If you add the full gallery upgrade (5-10 images) before your session date, you save $100. If you wait until after you have seen everything and fall in love with half the gallery, the option is still there - just at a higher price.
No pressure in either direction. I just think it is worth knowing before April 11 arrives, not after.
All the details are at the link in bio. Only a few spots remain.
More time does not always mean better results.
I know that feels counterintuitive. We are wired to think that more equals more - more time, more options, more opportunity for something great to happen.
But here is what I have actually observed after years of photographing families with young children: kids have a window. A cooperative, engaged, genuinely present little window. And when you work within that window instead of pushing past it, the photos reflect it. Smiles are real. Energy is light. Nobody ends up in tears in the parking lot.
A focused five to seven minutes with a photographer who knows how to move quickly and intentionally will outperform a long, drawn-out session almost every time when young children are involved.
That is the whole premise behind the Maclay Gardens Spring Petites. Short on purpose. Effective by design.
*Photos in this post are from a full length maternity session, but each of these were taken in a 5 minute window of time during that session.