
Iโll never forget when I delivered a gallery to a sweet mom, and she messaged me with: โThese made me cry. Iโve never seen myself like this.โ Cue my own little dance in my kitchen, donโt judge. Thatโs the magic of candid photography: seeing the moments you didnโt even know existed, the ones that show the love, the chaos, and the beautiful reality of motherhood.

Moms Are Always Behind the Camera
If youโre a mom, I bet your phone is bursting with photos of your kids: their first steps, their silly faces, their masterpiece crayon drawings on your walls. And letโs not forget the dozens of group shots at family events where everyone looks greatโฆ except, wait, where are you? Oh, right. Youโre the one taking the picture. Moms are like the stealthy ninjas of family photography, always capturing the memories but rarely appearing in them. Itโs almost as if weโre trying to make ourselves invisible.
Um, excuse me!!
Spoiler alert: weโre not.

But hereโs the thing: Moms matter. You were there too. You did the bedtime stories, the epic pancake breakfasts, the dance parties in the living room. And someday, when your kids look back at those moments, theyโll want to see you there, too, smiling, laughing, and being the heart of their childhood.
Candid Photos: The Ultimate Love Letter to Yourself

When I photograph families, I always make it a point to turn the lens on moms. And not just the posed โhey, look over here and smileโ kind of shots. Iโm talking about the real, raw, blink-and-youโll-miss-it moments. Like when your toddler grabs your face for a sloppy kiss or when youโre laughing so hard at your partnerโs dad joke that youโve got tears streaming down your face. Those are the moments that make you, you.
The beauty of candid photos is that theyโre not about perfection. Itโs not about having your hair perfectly curled or your kids sitting neatly in matching outfits (though props to you if you manage that). Itโs about capturing the love, the chaos, and everything in between. Itโs about giving yourself permission to exist in the frame with messy hair, yoga pants, and whatever mixed match socks you found closest by.

What Will Your Kids Remember?
When your kids grow up and flip through photo albums or scroll through your digital archives, theyโre not going to care about whether you had makeup on or if the kitchen was spotless. Theyโll care that you were there. Theyโll care about seeing the way your eyes lit up when you looked at them, the way you held them close, and the way you made their world feel safe and full of love.
Imagine your grown-up daughter showing her own kids a picture of you laughing in the backyard, holding her as a toddler. Sheโll say, โThis is your grandma. She was always so full of life.โ Thatโs the legacy of a candid photo: itโs not just a picture; itโs a memory, a story, a connection that transcends time.

Change the Narrative
Moms, this is your gentle nudge, no, your loving shove, to get in the frame. Be part of the memories. Let someone else hold the camera (or better yet, let me do it). Because you deserve to be seen, celebrated, and remembered just as much as everyone else in your family.
So, next time you book a photo session, donโt shy away from the camera. Embrace it. Laugh. Dance. Be unapologetically you. And when you see those photos, I hope youโll tear up, as well, because youโll see what everyone else sees: a mom who is bold, beautiful, and full of magic.























































