Family Family

Nashville Family Filmmaker + Photographer | The Howard Family

Gosh, I cannot believe I have gone down to Tampa Florida 4 years in a row to capture this sweet family! It just keeps blowing my mind, each year as their film day approaches, that a whole year has gone by again. Their kids are growing so fast. I love how much their whole family cherishes these films. How they make them laugh and cry and they just absolutely will never not have one. The amount of meaningfulness these films bring to this family fills my heart so much. It's like our souls both completely understand the importance of it all.This year, they were fostering a sweet girl in their family. It' so sweet that they will have a film to remember her and how much she meant to their whole family during her stay.I love how big their biggest is getting and how special their time with her is. How they give her space to grow and be independent. I love how their older son is respected when he needs to be alone. He is a sweet sweet boy and introverted.Their youngest boy is HUGE (2 years old) and spunky as all get out. The wild card for sure.and I cannot WAIT to see them in 2026, film them and hug them. I love these people.If you want a family film to capture a day in your life, let's chat!

   

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Maternity Maternity

Nashville Maternity Photographer | Sarah + Tyson's In-Home Maternity Session

Having Maternity Photos done can be so daunting, depending on how you are feeling in your pregnancy or how you feel about your changing body, especially with the first baby. You can feel "big" or "fat" and in the moment, it can feel easy to give into those feelings and just skip out on maternity photos. I think many women feel negative thoughts about their pregnant bodies. They hurt and just feel so BLAH and fat. But I think later, as they grow in motherhood, they truly come to appreciate the miraculous journey that being pregnant and having a baby really is.That's how so much of life really is. When we're in the thick of whatever season we are in, we don't see the beauty in it and are so busy being deep in it, that we kind of just want to be in the next season. But later, we look back and see a lot of beauty in it, and if we are blessed to have video and or photos of that season, those can tell an even more meaningful story of that season.I love capturing maternity photos the way I do. A mix of documentary (real life) and slightly posed to give my clients the best of both worlds. I love showing them how incredible their body is. If you want a maternity session with me, please reach out to me here! I would LOVE to chat!

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Family Family

Nashville Newborn Photographer | The Charm of Lived-In Spaces: Why You Don't Need a Pinterest-Perfect Home

Scrolling through social media these days, it is so easy to feel less than when it comes to our home. Other people's homes seem to be perfectly curated and decorated and look professionally done. But if you have ever stopped mid scroll, and looked around to see your son's dirty socks, your daughter's barbies strewn about and laundry on the sofa needing put away, you are not alone.

Guess what? That cozy, chaotic, well-used space you’re living in? It tells a story. One far more meaningful than a curated photo ever could.

Home Isn’t a Showroomβ€”It’s a Story

A lived-in home is filled with personality. The dent in the coffee table? That’s from a board game night that got a little too competitive. The art on the fridge? Masterpieces by your kids or niece. The mismatched mugs in the kitchen? Each one collected from a place or moment that made you smile.

These imperfections don’t detract from your home’s beautyβ€”they create it.

Real Life Is Messy, and That’s Okay

Perfection is exhausting. Living up to a social media standard of design can turn your home into a stage instead of a sanctuary. A home should work for you, not the other way around.

You don’t need throw pillows fluffed just so, or color-coded bookshelves to feel at peace in your space. Comfort and authenticity trump aesthetics every single time.

Design Should Support Lifeβ€”Not Replace It

There’s nothing wrong with wanting a beautiful home, but beauty doesn’t always mean polished. A couch with worn cushions that everyone fights to nap on has value. So does a kitchen table with scratches from years of family dinners, homework, and impromptu heart-to-hearts.

When your space is designed around the life you liveβ€”not the one you think you should be livingβ€”it becomes truly beautiful.

The Emotional Layer of Home

Homes hold memory. That slightly wobbly chair you’ve had since college? It’s seen you through heartbreaks and late-night chats. The blanket thrown haphazardly over the couch? It’s comforted more people than you can count.

These things might not be β€œon brand” with current trends, but they are on brand with you. And that’s what makes them special.

Final Thoughts: Choose Soul Over Style

It’s okay to love beautiful interiors. But if you find yourself apologizing for your home every time someone visits, it might be time to reframe what β€œbeautiful” really means.

Embrace the fingerprints on the glass, the cluttered entryway, the warm chaos of daily life. Because that’s what home really isβ€”a place that holds you, not a place that performs for others.

So no, you don’t need a Pinterest-perfect home. You need a home that feels like you.

Mom holds her newborn girl's hand to comfort her First time parents comfort their newborn baby girl

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Newborn, Newborn Newborn, Newborn

Nashville Newborn Photographer | Studio posed vs in-home lifestyle newborn photography

It's 2025 and a lot has changed in 10 years. I spent many years perfecting newborn posing and having a studio. I loved every second of it. But as life goes on and people change, I too changed. I changed my purpose behind my work and I changed how I felt about what I was doing. Does that mean I regretted it? Not at all. People shift. That's life. But since I have the unique position of having done posed newborn photography for over 6 years and now having done in-home lifestyle / documentary newborn photography for the past 8 years, I thought I would write about the differences, in case a mom out there is wondering, which one is right for her.

The poses.

Let's start with the difference in poses when comparing an in-home newborn session to a posed squishy newborn studio session. In the posed situation, baby is molded into various adorable poses that place them into a perfect position. the lips are brought out, the angles are perfect, the baby is folded to create a piece of art. It's absolutely precious. But what are the downsides?

Well, for one... did that baby ever naturally pose themselves that way? Not usually. So it kind of tells a false narrative. Vs... when you do an in-home newborn session just a week or two postpartum (or longer if doing a newborn video), the baby is never intentionally posed. Everything is organic and natural and the positions he or she puts themself in, tells the story of how that baby may have positioned itself in the womb. The story is what I am after in my work - the story was what I was missing in my old style of photography. The story is what we will miss.

The photos.

In the studio, the photos are very similar to the 90s olan mills days. (the thing we don't want to admit!) Everyone is posed the same as every other family and it's a factory assembly line. Your family is family #4 for the week, and will be put through all the same poses as the family before that and before that. It is very cookie cutter. Whereas, when I go into the home of a family, everything about them is unique, and I hone in on that. The furniture, the state their home is in (moving boxes tell the story of how you just moved into your new home just before baby was born), its all a time stamp of what life was like the year you had your baby. We miss these elements of story telling in some of our modern photography ways... in the 80s and 90s, we had albums from photos that we got off of a polaroid or a disposable camera. There were items randomly placed on a coffee table, the sofa was the mess that it was - and ALL of it told the story of that year and that time in your life. The beauty of the items laying around or the imperfections is the depth of the story told.

The pacing of the session

This might be the best part. With a studio session, there is stress about getting out of the house with a newborn and trying to remember all the things you'll need. You get to the studio and the photographer definitely has a lot of patience (I hope) and you can relax and watch your newborn be posed and photographed. But she might have someone else coming in and will move through the poses as quickly as she can for you and her - to let you get home and resting again. When I come to your home, it's just us hanging out. Baby's fussy? we just sit and chat and let you nurse. Need a snack? No problem, I set my camera down (or maybe I don't) and we just chat and eat. There is ZERO pressure. Not ready when I arrive? Cool, I will just chat with the hubby or pet the dog... You get my drift. I want nothing more for you than for this to be the easiest possible session ever. You don't even have to have a clean house, I wont flinch if it's a mess of stuff. If I need something moved, we just move it. All I care about is that you are able to enjoy your day being photographed as a family with a new baby. and that I leave and you feel like that experience was so easy and fun. I usually spend between 1-2 hours, depending on the family's pace at a session. You're my only session that day and I want to come with an open heart ready to give your session 150%.

In-home newborn photography is more candid, real life, capturing things like the nursery and your home, letting you just do what you have been doing - loving on your new baby - and Im just there to hang out while you do it. And if you happen to add on a film, I will even get to capture all of those amazing baby noises and coos - and how baby responds and lights up when you talk to them. If this is something you are interested in, contact me here!Β 

Mom holds her newborn girl's hand to comfort her

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Birth Birth

Nashville Birth Videographer + Photographer | 5 Things No one Tells you about birth

You have dreamed of someday, having a baby, of seeing that line show up on the test, of who you might be married to when it happens. and finally, that dream has come true.

Being pregnant is so humbling. From morning sickness to growing larger and larger - it is just so hard and so humbling. It comes with an array of emotions as you process your body changing and also, that you'll have an incredible little life to be in charge of soon. It's a lot of change! You will get so many different view points that you will be annoyed by week 20. But what aren't people telling you that you might even want to hear?

Home Birth Doula Midwife Water birth Earthside Birth tubs white birth tub Liberty midwifery

1. Your emotions will be wild after birth.

After having your baby, you'll have this high of emotions. The surge of these hormones will help you to fall in love with your baby and to have the energy to be what baby needs. But those emotions will come down at some point and when they do, you'll feel sad. You might suddenly cry when your baby has their first big blow out or outgrows a newborn outfit - all of these emotions are normal. They are part hormonal and part because you are processing everything that has happened. My recommendation is to find a way to let the emotions flow. Journaling or just sitting in them, helps them to be processed in a healthier way so that you can feel more stable.

mother labors at home in birth tub water birth

2. Birth isn't as awful as we may have heard.

Labor isn't as painful and terrible as you might have heard. It can be hard for some, definitely. But if you can take a good quality course like Bradley Method and learn how to labor well, it can help a lot. Pain can be lessened by taking lots of magnesium during pregnancy and having loose fascia. The key is to be relaxed in your body and to surrender your mind and body to the process. And of course, I highly recommend hiring a doula. A doula can make the pain significantly less! And if your plan is to have an epidural, well I would have a plan B because I had to have 3 epidurals and none of them worked and I had no way to manage the pain. I was also induced and so that was absolutely awful. My 2nd pregnancy I had no epidural and knew how to handle labor and had a doula and it was a MUCH better experience.

Midwife Sarah fuqua ford of August Birth loves on her client in labor during a home birth

3. You will still looks pregnant... even after your baby has been born.

It takes a while for everything to shrink down. You just grew a whole human and your body will take a few weeks or longer to reduce your uterus and tissues back to their new size. Pack something cozy in your hospital bag or have something ready for after your home birth and just know that's part of the process.

Nashville birth photographer videographer home birth natural birth vbac midwife haven birth and wellness

4. Nursing struggles are normal.

I don't actually think this next one is a surprise these day, but nursing doesn't always come naturally. It can feel awkward as you step into this new life of becoming a mother and if so, just know it's okay. I think having grace on yourself is going to go so far in these first weeks as a new mother. Between oral ties and weird nipples, nursing struggles are normal. I do think it is so worth the work of pushing forward because the reward of being able to nurse is so great - from feeling confident as a nurturer to the extreme benefits breast milk has for baby - and the anti breast cancer effects of nursing - I believe that women can achieve it if they are willing to ask for help - and maybe even if they need help more than once. Get CFT on baby and mom, which can help nursing significantly and hire the best lactation consultant if needed. Let other women come help you step into this role and remember, you weren't meant to do this alone.

Nashville birth photographer videographer home birth natural birth vbac midwife haven birth and wellness

5. Things very likely may not go according to plan

I think it is extremely important to hold your birth plans loosely. If you are overly tied to the plans and stuck in a state of control of the outcome, it will hinder not only your ability to give birth but also the first few hours you spend with your baby, because you will be in a state of shock over how it all played out. Many of us know that hospital births are a much more challenging place to follow "birth plans" and that is why I personally, would never have a hospital birth without a doula to advocate for me while I can be in my own body and mind working hard on birth and labor. But regardless of where you choose to birth, sometimes things Β like inductions and assistance are warranted. My own births were emergency C-sections (I now know I have an extremely curved tail bone, they can't even find the end of it and think that played a huge role). Having had tried for a v-bac with the 2nd baby, I can honestly say in hindsight, I would prioritize my emotions after birth over the way the birth played out because I was so upset with myself for having failed my birth plan and wish I could have been more emotionally stable and in the moment those first weeks of my son's life. So, to sum up, have plans ... but have advocates between you and the medical staff, so that you can trust the plans if they change a little better and be in a good headspace for your postpartum period.

6. Pushing isn't necessary

One thing I have learned in the many many births I have attended, is that pushing forcefully isn't actually that normal and necessary. For one, if it is unwarranted, it can ruin your pelvic floor. For two, you have a fetal ejection reflex, which is defined as "a natural, involuntary process where the body expels the baby during the second stage of labor without the need of forced pushing" .... it's pretty cool. Anyway, a good midwife will coach you to relax your pelvic floor vs pushing against tension, which will translate to a healthier pelvic floor and less chance of tearing. It's more of a breathing down into your pelvic floor and less of a forced push. It's a surrender rather than a workout.Home Birth Doula Midwife Water birth Earthside Birth tubs white birth tub Liberty midwifery Kimberly Williams doulaI hope you enjoyed this blog about birth! If you want your own birth filmed, please reach out to me and let's chat!Β  

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Birth Birth

Nashville, TN Birth Videographer + Photographer | Why you need to prioritize rest and healing postpartum

Society. Our society is so wild. They have put this expectation on mothers that after we deliver a whole human we grew from nothing, that we are able to bounce right back, look amazing, and juggle all things motherhood within a few short weeks of giving birth. And as much as society is to blame, being stubborn as women, we are to blame too.

I want to talk about the things that need to happen postpartum and why it is so incredibly important to do whatever you can to heal and rest WELL during this period.

First of all, you are healing a dinner plate sized wound in your uterus. You need REST to heal that well. You are also VERY depleted from sharing all your nutrients with a baby for 9 months AND now you are sharing even MORE nutrients with that baby via nursing. Being friends with many midwives and doulas, I can tell you that postpartum you will need 4k cals a day of food to heal and recover and renourish your body. This information is from a doula who got specific training in postpartum nutrition. The lack of these 4k cals is why women's hair falls out, why postpartum depression and even psychosis exists as well as postpartum anxiety. It's why women feel completely exhausted. We have somehow managed to normalize waking up, drinking coffee first thing, eating nothing until noon and then barely surviving the day and wondering why we feel the way we do.

Whether you hire someone to help postpartum, or your husband and you have a plan that involves food prep, etc - PRIORITIZE getting nutrients in. It has even been said that mom doesn't even need to be drinking plain water, because ideally, she is drinking raw milk and bone broth - liquid calories - during the day, rather than water.

Your ONLY job postpartum is to rest and snuggle your newborn for AT LEAST one week. (per midwives' recommendation). When mommas are out of bed too soon and moving around too much, they run the risk of hemorrhaging from that dinner sized wound I mentioned earlier. The general rule of thumb in a home-birth setting is 5-5-5. Five days IN the bed, five days ON the bed, and five days NEAR the bed. To rest, to eat well, to learn about your baby. Have help mama, ASK for HELP. Find someone in your family or friends to come help. If possible, have a mother or mother in law come stay for a few weeks, and if that doesn't work, find friends to rotate through. Teach your husband about postpartum and set up plans for postpartum healing. Have a cleaning person, etc. Whatever helps you feel calm and rested. Because, you do not need to be stressed postpartum either - as your nervous system regulates the baby's.

These first few weeks with your baby go by SO incredibly fast. SOAK THEM IN. Don't try to do it all and miss this time. The laundry will aways be there waiting for you, but a 1 week old won't be, because he will turn 2 weeks shortly. So stare at your baby, be calm entering motherhood and set the stage for those first few years of mothering that baby. Start off in peace and love and being loved on.

We weren't meant to do this alone, ever. We weren't meant to be SO damn independent that it comes at a cost to our central nervous system. We were meant to be cared for and loved on during our pregnancy and postpartum periods.

I should also mention how much how we handle this time period can affect the future. If we aren't nourished well postpartum, this will greatly affect us when we get to be in our 40s. What happens is, women enter perimenopause very early and have a much harder menopause transition.

How we feel, in our nervous system, those first few weeks makes a HUGE difference in baby. If our fascia is tight because we are stressed, baby's fascia is also tight. Which then affects baby's ability to latch and nurse. I highly recommend having a provider come to the home if possible to give you and baby some CFT (cranial sacral fascial therapy) (which is not the same as CST). It is called the Gillespie method and it loosens fascia for baby and mom (because baby mimics mom) and can dramatically help the body be calm and relaxed. I hope midwives get trained in it so they can provide this service to their mamas.

mom eating postpartum after giving birth at home husband holds son for the first time.

You can enter motherhood in peace and love and become the mother you want to be. But it actually comes from doing LESS those first weeks and not from doing MORE. Put down the stubbornness and surrender to motherhood, the most amazing ride you will get to go on. You are amazing for prioritizing your health which then prioritizes your children's health.

Warmly,

Jennie

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Birth Birth

Nashville Birth Videographer + Photographer | 7 Questions to ask your birth photographer

What does on call time look like?

I go on call at 37 weeks and stay on call until 42 weeks or until baby arrives. Every time I leave the house, I have my birth bag and camera with me, in case I get called. I am ready to go 24/7 and will discuss in detail with you when to let me know you are in labor.

What if you are not able to attend my birth?

I most likely will not miss your birth because Im at another birth, because I do not take births that overlap much. I spread out my clients by at least a few weeks. Because it is that important to me to be at your birth, as I realize that I am one of very few birth videographers in the Nashville area. The only way I would be unable to attend is in the case of severe sickness or a life altering event. If that did happen, I would credit you for the amount paid to be applied for future family sessions.

What happens if baby arrives before you get to the birth?

Sometimes, babies come faster than expected! Birth is wild and unpredictable sometimes. In most cases, I trust my intuition and head out sooner rather than later... even if that means I am there a bit longer than necessary. In the event that your baby arrives faster than expected and I do miss the actual delivery, I’ll be on my way just as quickly as I can to document the amazing first few hours of you with your new baby.

Do you have back up gear?

I do! I have backup microphones and a back up camera. I have multiple batteries, charged and ready to go.

Can I see a full gallery?

If a client has given me permission, I am happy to share a full gallery with you. There are also many images on my instagram and website!

Will you share my images?

I am SO grateful to the mamas who do let me share their photos and or film. Because it provides potential clients the opportunity to see my work. However, birth is incredibly sacred. Even if before your birth you have given me written permission to share anything, I text you images first and ASK permission. Every single time a birth photo or video is shared, I ask... because they are YOUR memories. Also, my clients see sneak peeks and their film before anyone else does. This is incredible important to me, as memories are sacred.

Are you a doula?

I am not! and Thankfully so. I do not believe that a GOOD videographer has the capacity to capture your story fully AND be there for you like a doula should be. I have had two births and have attended many births. I had to learn all about labor and delivery in college, during my degree in developmental psychology. I myself, took the Bradley Method Birth course during my 2nd pregnancy. I feel extremely informed about birth and come highly recommended by many doulas and midwives in the area.

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Family Family

Nashville Family Photographer | The Aiken Family

I have been dying to spend time capturing this family. Not only are they so intentional with their lives, but they have such a fun dynamic with kids ranging from 2 to nearly 12! I loved capturing the smiles and laughs but also the sibling rivalry and emotions. I think the whole range of emotions in a family matters - it tells the WHOLE story of how deeply they love, even on hard days. This family did their normal routine of playing a game, starting the garden, playing on the swing set. Dad taught his daughter how to make pour over coffee. They have this cat that has chronic illness - they keep it because it's the right thing to do but sort of dislike the whole situation because it's a lot. The interplay of this sick cat and the family is rather hilarious. Multiple times, I went to capture a sweet moment with a cat in the frame for the cat to start hacking mucus up. We all just laughed at the juxtaposition. If you want your typical day captured, find me here!

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