Archive for the ‘Children’ Category

Wall products: Oak Box Frame and Contemporary multiaperture frame

Thursday, January 12th, 2012

For today’s post a couple of recent products I’ve produced for The Shah family whose baby Faris I photographed in the autumn starting off in London’s Hyde Park before returning to their home in Queensway.

They chose two products from my range: the Box Frame which comes in a choice of three mouldings: oak (as here) white or black.  Really any type of image looks great in these frames because of their sheer simplicity which also allows the image to do all the talking. The frame sits flush against the wall and the image sits level with the top of the 2 inch frame profile giving an image box effect. The prints are finished with a satin laminate to protect them in the years to come.

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The other framed product the Shah family chose was this from my Contemporary multiaperture range. These beautiful quality and highly finished frames work really well in both a traditional and modern interior. The wood is soft wood pine/obeche. A gesso is applied to the wood and they are then finished in a smooth black or white laminate moulding.

The frames are available as single frames, which are great for individual images of your child/ren, and multi aperture frames. Multi aperture frames are a fantastic way to display a mini photo story of your shoot in a single frame as here.

This white multi aperture frame contains three 9″x6″ prints in a landscape layout, but there is also the option to go bigger with 12″x8″ prints. The overall size of this frame is 36″ x 17.5″ but you can see all details of products and sizes here

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Children’s birthday party photography in Suffolk with Magic Olly

Saturday, December 3rd, 2011

Yesterday I posted images from my studio shoot with Oliver Graham from Magic Olly for his website and general publicity purposes. As well as the studio images, I also booked Olly to host my daughter and her friend’s 6th birthday party in September and took these of Olly in action on location.

Both sets of pictures are completely different - yesterday’s shot with flash in the studio on a plain background are all about showcasing what Olly can do as a performer.  These show the effect he has on a six year old audience, but together both sets of images will I hope help him to get the message across in pictures of what he is all about.

And that message is most definitely side splitting laughter and pure fun.

Olly entertained the children from the minute they walked in til the moment they left, and had them eating out of his hands. They didn’t stop smiling for 2 hours and were either mesmorised  by Ollie’s tricks or literally falling about at his hilarious jokes.  Apart from putting out the food, the parents just sat back and relaxed in deck chairs. Result!

I love photographing children’s birthday parties. They are quite different from the children’s and family portraiture sessions that I do,  but they have a similar buzz about them as children let loose after being cooped up in a church at a wedding,  or when they are released from the classroom at the end of the school  day: the more children there are, the more they tune out from you, run and play free and just be themselves and then you can really capture their personalities and natural interaction with each other.

My daughter loves these images and it is great to have a record of your children once they get to this age where friendships start to be so important to them and life is increasingly about having fun with your mates. And it is great to mark photographically that all important landmark in the year, their birthday,  as well as more quietly and intimately on their own or on a family portraiture session.

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Children’s and Family Photographer in Woodbridge, Suffolk IP12

Tuesday, November 15th, 2011

I am so lucky to have two bases to work from as a children’s and family photographer: the most urban of urban bases in Central London and by contrast in the heart of rural Suffolk with it’s wonderful natural land and seascape, big open skies, woodland, unspoilt countryside and famous coastline that attracts families all over Britain to it every year for holidays by the sea.

So it is great in any given month to find myself one day photographing a child in Hyde Park or Wandsworth common, and the next to be building sandcastles on the beach at Aldeburgh.

Last weekend I was in Suffolk and set out early for a children’s photography session on my doorstep in the centre of Woodbridge. I had a lovely time integrating into the lives of these two gorgeous little boys.

We are now heading out of Autumn and into winter, but contrary to what many people think, winter is a great time for family photographs. As long as everyone is warm - and children always are as they rarely stand still - getting out into that winter landscape, whether it be cloudy, frosty, snowy or sunny,  on a winter’s morning is a perfect family activity.

And woods really are one of the best place to photograph toddlers and young children -  there is a freedom and magic in them that aids the children’s play and imagination, and they are the perfect backdrop for photographing children in a natural landscape.

We had a lovely time looking out for bears, foxes and gruffulos, finding the best stick, playing hide-and-seek, peering into tree stumps for beetles and bugs and generally kicking about in the autumn leaves.

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Baby and Family portrait Photography in Kensington & Westminster London

Wednesday, November 2nd, 2011

Last week I travelled to Queens Gate in London’s Kensington/Westminster area where I spent the morning with a gorgeous 8 month old baby boy.

I arrived early (good for babies who are often at their best first thing,  and also for Dad who needed to head off to work) and we kicked off  with a morning stroll and play in London’s Hyde Park before heading home for baby’s routine nap - followed by a good look out of the window spotting buses going past , cuddling mummy, and … well just smiling at everything and everyone really.

It is always great if you can do some photographs inside and some out on a family photo session and of course visiting the family in their home is the absolute ideal at any age but especially at the baby stage.

I aim to produce a whole mixture of shots in any family portrait photography session, and it is lovely to just shadow and capture the family  doing all the things they would if I wasn’t there - relaxing, playing and interacting,  as well as going about their everyday routines.

I can honestly say that I loved practically all the images from this shoot but here are a few that really stood out for me:

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Teenage Photography: Eleanor

Wednesday, September 21st, 2011

I took these one evening in France this summer of my 14 year old niece Eleanor.

When photographing teenagers I find there are three approaches you can go for:

One is to work with them by constructing the image together in the very contrived but collaborative way -  involving them and thereby making it fun in terms of what they wear, where they position themselves, the pose, the look etc  -  similar I suppose to a fashion shoot (except here we just chanced upon the old discarded Citroen and their was no planning or styling,  just me and Eleanor enjoying the light, the quiet evening atmosphere, and plotting how we could bring all these elements together to make a quick sale to Top Shop so we could go on holiday again). There’s no denying it, most teenage girls love this kind of thing.

The result, as here, is often pleasing, idealised, romantic and otherworldly, but when I’m taking pictures like this I can sense the tension in myself between the contrivance and manipulation and idealising of a person, and the opposite desire to get them to ‘be themselves’. Can pictures like these ever describe anything more than a surface of what’s there in front of you: a fashion statement or a depiction of of something beautiful?

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With most of my family shoots with teenagers I might suggest a bit of this but more often I go for my second and third approaches. The second is simply to  just hang out with them, spend time with them, and wait til they get either bored with me and my camera and stop being conscious or aware of me, or more likely diverted by something else - in this case a stray kitten:

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As well as a good deal of the hands-off, observing, anticipating a moment and trying to capture it, I also have a third approach which is the complete opposite: to be completely upfront, and simply go for it very speedily as with these two very spontaneous posed portraits - completely aware,  but no time for self consciousness:

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And then sometimes, occasionally these two approaches sort of come together: This is interesting and the sort of image I love to get as it’s such a good example of  what happens when children are diverted and absorbed by an activity - again in this case the therapeutic power of a kitten to stroke. Here I asked them momentarily to turn to me, but they are not really connecting with me: they are relaxed and zoned out and in their own moment with each other and the animal. We have to work harder to read these faces but they draw us in, and because I know these two children so well, I know I have captured something of what lies underneath:

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But the question remains: How far can any photographic portrait reveal a window onto an individual’s spirit?  Can one, or even a dozen images, ever give us the full picture? I think the answer is probably no.

Perhaps these pictures simply show that we are just as diverse -  complex even -  on the outside as we are within…. and that we can be endlessly photographed but still the lens will find another ‘view’, the photographer will find their own ’spin’ and as subjects we will present a different version of ourselves to it.

This balance between director and observer, constructing and capturing images,  subjectivity and objectivity continues to  fascinate (and puzzle) me even after 10 years of photographing people.

In the end it doesn’t really matter - if pictures bring pleasure, that’s all -  perhaps the closest we can ever get to an answer is by asking the subject themselves and those close to them - parents and other family and friends.

On a lighter note, this one is for Eleanor, because she would not forgive me if I hadn’t posted at least one shot of him:

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Images & text © 2009 Anna McCarthy, all rights reserved
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