There’s something wildly beautiful about a slow, relaxed family session at home. Especially when I get to capture it on film. This is the kind of session where nobody is rushing. Nobody is trying too hard to perform, it’s just how you naturally live! The toddler leads the rhythm of the day, and honestly, we all just follow along.
This session felt exactly like that.



Two full hours of wandering barefoot through their home in St. Louis.
Snack break and story time.
Tiny hands gripping books upside down. Dad carrying his daughter through softly lit hallways while she proudly waved a toy in his face like it was the most important treasure in the world.
These are the memories you will always want to keep. In 10, 15 or 20 years… these are the photos that will transport you right back to these good ol’ days.
And that’s the thing I love most about photographing families this way. No one has to perform. You truly can just be.




That’s the beautiful, magical thing about letting kids just be kids.
I always tell families this before a session. Kids do not reveal their personalities in the first ten minutes. Sometimes not even the first thirty.
They need time. Time to decide you’re safe and settle into their routines again. Time to forget the camera exists.
This little girl absolutely owned the session once she warmed up. One second she was quietly flipping through books with her mom on the couch. The next she was proudly climbing onto the kitchen island in a lavender tutu while her dad stood nearby laughing.





It was playful and completely unforced. This is the beauty of a documentary style session that I will always be drawn to as an artist.
The family styled everything so beautifully. They wore textures like soft knits and tulle. Paired them with delicate florals, creamy neutrals, pale pinks.
Even the nursery felt like something out of a vintage storybook. Think: mauve walls, floral wallpaper, brass crib details, warm window light spilling across the carpet.
Editorial in the best way because it was still deeply lived in.





Wanna know why film feels so personal? Why this relaxed family session at home really speaks to you?
Film changes the way I photograph.
I’m not rapid firing through hundreds of images hoping something sticks. I’m slowing down. Watching carefully. Waiting for moments to fully land before pressing the shutter.
And honestly, families feel that shift too.
Film loves texture. It loves movement. It loves imperfect light and ordinary moments. The slightly blown-out windows. The grain in darker hallways. The blur of a toddler mid-spin. It all feels nostalgic before the photos are even developed.
I think people sometimes assume their home needs to look perfect before booking an in-home session. But perfection is honestly the least interesting thing to photograph.
What matters is presence.



These are the rooms your children are growing up in.
The toys scattered across the floor. The way morning light hits the nursery walls. The tiny routines you’ll forget someday unless someone preserves them for you.
That’s what makes these images feel emotional years later.
This session felt warm, nostalgic, playful, and deeply personal from beginning to end.
Exactly what I hope every slow, relaxed family session at home on film becomes.
If you want to book your own session, click here to get in touch!