Mr. and Mrs. Gibson

What a cool couple! Ashley and Travis have known each other for years, and there is more history than my blog can do justice. So I'll just mention a few other things. They're untraditional, which I love. That made me get a little untraditional with how I shot their wedding. For starters, I shot the group photos with all of the wedding guests casually milling about in the background. I really like how it turned out. In fact, when I go through all of their photos, there's a definite theme of wedding guests always being visible, from the cake cutting to the dances to the toasts. It really works for their wedding--there were only 70 guests.

Both the wedding and the reception were at the Cross Timbers Winery in Grapevine, Texas. I've actually shot a reception there before years ago, so it was great to return. Maybe I'll be back again.

Family Fun at the Dallas Arboretum

The Dallas Arboretum is the place to shoot couples, brides, and families. In fact, most of the time you end up snapping pics of the same people in that order! That's how it

has been with the Prices, dear friends of mine since ... a while back.

Anyway, their daughter is about to be two (WHAT), so we went to the Arboretum (again) to get some photos of their little family before she turns 22.

Sisters, Friends Forever

Here's the problem with taking photos of newborns: It makes me want another baby. Honestly, that isn't a problem. I mean, why wouldn't I want another snuggly, cuddly, cooing little baby to hold and love and protect?

I got my baby fix this weekend, though, with little Miss Taylor and her big sister, Natalie. These sweet girls just grabbed my heart and hung on tightly the entire time we spent together.

I love spending time with sisters. It makes me think of when my sis and I were kids. We were each other's best friends. And to this day, my sister knows me in a way that no one else ever will.

I'm so humbly happy I got to capture these moments between young sisters. I hope they see these photos when they're older and love them.

Rain won't stop family portraits.

The Ta Family wanted family portraits in a hurry. The problem was that it was cold, rainy, and all around gross outside. We had a few indoor options. One was a studio with normal, colorless backgrounds.

The other was Lakewood Brewing Company. And because the Tas are cool people, they had no qualms about shooting family portraits with brew tanks in the background.

So they brought the kids and I brought some lights and we had a great session indoors. Everyone stayed dry, and some of the adults even got a treat afterwards.

Phood Fotography

I'm trying to get this happy little photo gig shooting some food. Food photography isn't my forte, however. I've seen real food photographers and stylists do their thing and it's incredible.

Did you know there's a Chanel nail polish that's the industry standard for shrimp tails? True story.

The photography team behind one restaurant's ads (that shall remain nameless) invented a cannon to shoot shrimp into the air for video shoots.

And it's well known in the industry that lemons and other citrus fruits are injected with small bits of water for up to a week for a shoot so they're as juicy as can be.

Food photography is its own science.

However, things are getting a bit more natural thanks to blogging and Pinterest. The new style is food that still styles, but can be eaten as soon as the lights are turned off. That is if there are lights.

Again, I'm not a food photographer by trade, but I'm trying to get a small food gig. Here's what I shot (and ate!) and presented to my potential clients. We'll see if anything comes from it.

 

 

I cal this Pinterest Food Bate. It's natural light, art directed, yet still edible.

I cal this Pinterest Food Bait. It's natural light, art directed, yet still edible.

 

Wedding at the Red Oak Ballroom in Fort Worth

This wedding was special for me. Mike is a very dear friend (in fact, he's the talented person who did this website) and Julie is a welcome addition to my "family." When Mike told me about Julie, I couldn't help but hope that they'd end up married. Well, my wish (mostly Mike's wish, let's be honest) came true.

They were married last weekend at the Red Oak Ballroom in Sundance Square in Fort Worth, TX. It was such a casual affair with the right amount of attention to detail. Julie was radiant and I've never ever seen Mike look so blissful in the many years I've known him.

I have so many photos I'd like to post of their wedding and reception, but they're on their honeymoon right now. So I'll wait until they get back to completely unload my camera card!

Wedding at the Red Oak Ballroom

 

Schol!

My husband has a bad habit. He comes home. Eats dinner. Then at 8 o'clock says to me, "Hey, I need some photos taken for the brewery. Tonight."

Tabletop photography takes FOREVER. Plus, it isn't my expertise.

But I love my husband. I love him dearly. And I'll do almost anything to help out Lakewood.

So we set up some sheets, lights, and found some scrap wood in the garage.

Here are the results of our late-night photo session starring Lakewood Brewing Company's BBT '14. We managed to wrap up before midnight and we (okay, I) only broke one light bulb.

Just Another Shoot

You can't tell by looking at the smiling family in the photo, but this shoot got very scary about 60 seconds later. The park we were at ended up being the unplanned destination of a police chase. We heard horrible screeching, metal crunching, stuff slamming, and then sirens.

We watched as a car tumbled and rolled it's way next to our parked cars. Then men jumped out of it and took off running. Then officers came from every direction. Before I could figure out what was going on, cops were everywhere, shouting at us to leave. There must've been 20 police cars. I saw lights. I saw men running. I saw guns.

It was insanity.

Before that, our photo shoot lasted about two minutes. However, it was a great two minutes before we all hightailed it out of there for our lives.

Photography isn't a very safe career choice, I guess.Tibbets-14_web

Flyin' High with Doug and Andy

Andy knows how to fly airplanes. And he has the license to do it. How cool is that?

So when they contacted me to shoot some photos of them flying over Dallas, I couldn't say yes fast enough.

However, shooting in a tiny, four-person plane has a unique set of challenges. First, it's tiny and a standard 50mm lens wouldn't cut it. In fact, even a 35mm wouldn't give me the width I'd need in order to fit both front-seat occupants in the photo. At least not in the way I wanted to.

So I picked the widest lens I could find that wasn't a fisheye. Nothing against fisheyes, it just wasn't part of my vision. That and getting my own body in the shot was already a concern, and with a fisheye, I was pretty much guaranteed to get my knees/feet in every shot.

So super wide angle it was. I still had to do some yoga-esque twisting in order to keep myself out of each shot, but the guys were cool with me taking over the back of the plane (which I did).

On the plus side, since we were in a tiny bubble, the light couldn't have been better. Thankfully! I can't even imagine trying to rig up lights for this. They'd have to be aimed in through the outside and this "easy" shoot would have gotten way to extreme and expensive way too quickly.

It was so windy, we ended up shooting on the ground. That worked out for the better, anyway, since I had to get out of my seatbelt to get angles.

Plus, Doug and Andy promised to give me a ride at a future date. I'm going to hold them to it!

D_and_A-web

the Bens Family

Spring has sprung and fall has fell. Even though it's still in the 80s, it's autumn in Dallas, which means it's a beautiful time to take family portraits. I had the chance to hang out with the Bens family this last weekend at the Dallas Arboretum. We were able to dodge the pumpkin-loving crowds long enough for some sweet family portraits.Family Portraits at the Dallas Arboretum

Babies are special.

I was fortunate enough to take photos of another perfect little baby the other day. It's very humbling that parents invite me into their homes to capture forever images of their families. Now that I'm a mom myself, I have a whole new outlook on family and what it means to love.

I try to make newborn sessions gentle. After all, you can't tell a baby what to do--they don't have words. And they're so tiny and delicate and precious, the last thing I want to do is disturb or distress them in any way.

So I work with parents and their baby. And we just take advantage of whatever mood the baby is in. I think the results are quite nice.

Newborn Photography

Chili & Monique

So I'm late to the blog party on this one. Chili and Monique had a wonderful wedding day back in May! It was actually this new mamma's first time away from the baby for longer than, say, two hours. But their perfect nuptials helped keep me from missing the little guy too much.

The weather was beautiful. Their vows were deeply heartfelt. And there was so much love floating on the air that it was absolutely infectious. I wish Chili and Monique the happiest life together.

Details Wedding

Catching breath.

A while ago, my friend Mike* and I created a Website for Blue Caboose Children's Fund, a non-profit that helps children and families dealing with the hardships of Cystic Fibrosis treatment. The reason we got hooked up to this organization is because the founder and inspiration are good friends of my family's. More specifically, my cousin Noah's friend Jack has CF and his mother started BC4CF.

Anyway, Noah wrote a sweet article about his friendship with Jack and some of the stuff Jack and his mom are currently doing. I just wanted to share it.

 

Catching Breath

by Noah Johnson

 

I’ve always thought Jack and my friendship wasn’t an ordinary one. We are both normal suburban teens. We are so carefree and lazy that if the world depended on us for its survival, we all wouldn’t be here for long! So I’d say were some fairly average teenagers.

However, there’s one big thing that separates us from the rest, Jack has Cystic Fibrosis (CF), a chronic lung disease that causes sticky mucus to build up in the lungs. It doesn’t take a medical degree to understand that this disease can cause countless problems within the body; like extreme difficulty breathing, which you know is pretty important. It’s life threatening for the person with CF and life altering on his family and close friends.

Jack and many other CFers (the slang term for a CF patient) spend so much time in the hospital, it becomes a second home. Like any sane human being, my friend doesn’t want to be there for any length of time, yet he finds himself living in a hospital room for weeks at a time. Coincidentally, he knows how to make a long hospital stay and  CF treatments better. That’s why in winter of 2009, he debuted his foundation Jack in the Toy Box, the joy-filled premise being to deliver toys to CF kids both in and out of the hospital around Christmas time. It has been going strong for years and gets bigger every holiday season due to the community’s selfless donations.

Jack’s awesome mother, Kelly Colbert, later founded Blue Caboose 4 CF, a full-scale, non-profit organization dedicated to help not only CF patients, but the other people Cystic Fibrosis attacks, the families of the patients. The main thing about CF is that there are way more side effects than what a doctor can tell you.

Blue Caboose does its best to quell the endless pain and stress of medical bills, highway tolls and gas money to get to the hospital every night; the mystery of how students get basic school supplies; and the challenge of affording presents for the kids this Christmas. It also helps in ways that can’t be solved with dollars, the giving of comfort totes to families and parent support groups.

What separates this insanely cool charity from the rest is that it’s truly homegrown and focuses on quality over quantity. Every single dime goes into helping the families of CF. Kelly Colbert has Texas-sized plans to change what it means to have a loved one with this daunting disease. With donations and contributions, kids like Jack can see their families live more normal lives, and everyone can catch their breath.

 

 

*Mike also did my Website. He's gifted beyond measure.

My selfie game is strong.

You, too, can have selfies just like this. All it takes is a great DSLR camera, a few speed lights with soft boxes, some remote flash triggers, a remote shutter trigger, a few stands, a tripod, and a happy baby.

It's easier than it sounds. I promise!Lennox_and_Mommy06-web

Batman

I've been terrible about blogging since I've had my son. Okay, let's be honest. I've always been terrible about blogging. I shoot so many cool things, awesome people, and fun events, and they all go ignored on this blog.

Not that I have a ton of followers. But this thing is supposed to promote my business and I'm not really doing a great job of that.

So I have a new business proposal. I'm going to rent out my husband as Batman for children's parties. Heck, I'll rent him out for adult parties, too.

I haven't told him this, yet. But look at him in this Batsuit. You'd pay to have him (and a photographer) come to your party, right?Batman05

Leo

Mel and Scott welcomed Leo into the world three months ago. And since he's so expressive now, it was the perfect time to get some photos of him.

My son, Lennox

I'll never be able to top this year's birthday present to my husband. That's because this year on his birthday, I had our son.

Lennox Ash Bradley was born around brunch time. He was a big and beautiful and absolutely perfect.

Kudos to the Birth & Women's Center, who helped us bring our sunshine into the world. And super kudos to my husband, Craig, who was the best coach a mama could ever hope for.

And triple kudos to my precious little light, Lennox. It's difficult to put him down long enough to pick up the camera.

My son, Lennox.