Wife, mom, artist, and full-time chaos wrangler with a camera in one hand and snacks in the other. I live for the real stuff—belly laughs, big feelings, chipped nail polish, and quiet light that sneaks through the window just right.
This work is how I see the world…
and how I love it back.
There is a softness to the first weeks at home that doesn’t exist anywhere else.
The world is still loud outside. Emails are arriving. Dishes stack in the sink. Time moves the way it always has. But inside the house, everything slows to the rhythm of breath.
Feed. Hold. Sleep. Repeat.
New parents exist in a suspended space where exhaustion and awe live side by side. It’s messy. It’s tender. It’s holy in a very ordinary way.
That’s the place I want to photograph.
Not a studio version of your baby.
Your real life with your baby.

Newborn photography doesn’t need props or elaborate setups to be meaningful. It needs context.
The bed where you’ll rock them at 3am.
The chair where you’ll learn their cry.
The dog who is still figuring out what just happened.
The room where your life quietly rearranged itself.
In-home newborn sessions in Loudoun County allow families to stay grounded in the place where their story is actually unfolding. There is no packing bags, no rushing out the door, no pressure to perform. You stay in your environment. You move at your baby’s pace.
And when families feel safe, the photographs breathe.






This session wasn’t about posing a baby perfectly.
It was about documenting a family in the earliest days of becoming.
A mother learning the shape of her child in her arms.
A father holding the weight of something brand new.
A dog watching over the bed like a quiet guardian.
Tiny fingers curling around an adult thumb.
Sleep-smiles that flicker in and out like dreams.
These are the details that disappear the fastest. The scale of a newborn against a grown chest. The way their face folds into someone’s shoulder. The small, unrepeatable gestures that only exist for a handful of weeks.
Newborn photography is not about perfection.
It’s about preservation.

Families across Loudoun County, Purcellville, Leesburg, Ashburn, and the greater Northern Virginia area often tell me they want newborn photos that feel real — not staged, not stiff, not overly styled.
In-home newborn sessions offer exactly that. Natural light. Familiar spaces. Honest connection.
Your house does not need to look like a magazine. It needs to look like your life. Years from now, these images will not be judged by how tidy the room was. They will be loved because they show where your family began.
That’s the archive we’re building.
Not decoration.
Memory.






The first weeks after birth are not meant for performance. They are meant for nesting. For learning each other. For letting the world shrink down to the size of a bassinet and a heartbeat.
Photographing newborns at home honors that season instead of interrupting it. You don’t step out of your life to create photographs — the photographs grow directly from it.
And that’s why they last.
They are proof that this happened.
That you were here.
That this love was real and visible and enormous.
This is what love looks like up close.

If you’re searching for a newborn photographer in Loudoun County, Northern Virginia, or the Washington, DC area, in-home sessions offer a calm, documentary approach to preserving your baby’s earliest days.
I photograph newborn sessions throughout Purcellville, Leesburg, Ashburn, Lincoln, and surrounding communities, focusing on natural light, honest connection, and the lived-in beauty of real family life. These sessions are baby-led, relaxed, and built around your pace — not a studio timeline.





If you want newborn photographs that feel human, grounded, and timeless, I would love to help you document this chapter.
👉 Inquire here to schedule your in-home newborn session
Because years from now, when the house is louder and the baby is taller, these images will bring you back.
This is what love looks like up close.









When should newborn photos be taken?
Newborn sessions are typically photographed within the first 2–3 weeks after birth, when babies are still sleepy and curled. That said, I document newborns beyond that window all the time. The goal isn’t a rigid timeline — it’s preserving the season you’re actually living in.
Do I need to clean my house before an in-home newborn session?
No. Truly. You don’t need a magazine-perfect home. We work with natural light and meaningful spaces — a bed, a couch, a nursery corner. The focus is connection, not clutter.
What should we wear for an in-home newborn session?
Soft, neutral tones and comfortable clothing photograph beautifully. Think textures over patterns, movement over stiffness. I guide every family beforehand so you don’t have to guess.
How long does a newborn session last?
In-home newborn sessions are baby-led and typically last 1–2 hours. We pause for feeding, soothing, diaper changes — whatever your baby needs. There is no rush.
Do siblings and pets participate?
Absolutely. Siblings and pets are part of the story. Some of the most meaningful images come from those early interactions as everyone adjusts to the new rhythm of the house.
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