What Dress-Up Looks Like

If any of you follow me on Facebook, or if you read this post, you'll know that my three-year-old daughter is a huge fan of dressing up.  Not just on Halloween... but almost every day.  That girl can dirty some laundry, I tell ya.  She almost always dresses herself, and I let her.  I pick my battles, and this is not one I'm willing to fight.  Whether it's changing her regular clothing four times a day, or dressing up in her favorite costumes, I rarely see her in the same outfit for more than a couple of hours.  But seeing her develop her own funky sense of style and her own independence is totally worth all the laundry I have to wash. Recently Lila's most beloved dress is that of Disney's Rapunzel character.  She goes everywhere in that purple dress, despite the fact that it's been torn and mended three times.  She doesn't mind at all that it's tattered and unraveling.  She wears her boots with it, or sometimes flip-flops, and even sparkly pink sequined ballet slippers.  In her sweet lisp, she tells me that she wants to grow her hair "down to da grath (grass), like Rapunthel."  For now her waist-length hair is worn down, up, braided, pigtailed, or crowned with one of her several various tiaras.  She usually wears earrings, necklaces, layers and layers of beads, and often carries a tiny purse with pretend makeup and other preschooler "essentials" tucked inside.  And don't forget the shiny plastic cell phone!  You never know when the prince may call.

We frequently enter Publix or Target with Lila dressed in full princess attire.  We get winks and knowing smiles from all the other moms who've been in our shoes themselves, and she trots around just as proud as a peacock.

She runs around the house in some swimsuit or another, all year round.  And, usually, she wears three or four swimsuits in single day's time.  It's not uncommon for me to say, "We can't go inside, honey.  You're wearing a bathing suit and fairy wings."

She has been known to hit the playground in her tiara and her shiny red patent shoes.  And run just as hard as she would if she were wearing tennis shoes.

She wears clip-on sparkly earrings to the doctor's office.  Or anywhere else she wants, really.

And ya know something?  I love it.

Lila is such a girl's girl.  Sparkles and sequins, glitter and garb, dresses and plastic high heels.  She revels in it all.  We keep her dress-up treasures inside a vintage green Lady Baltimore suitcase that I picked up at a thrift store last year.  It's perfect.

I've had these photographs in my head forever, and I plan to continue with a little series of Lila in all her dress-up adventures in the coming weeks.  I have lots more images swimming around in my head that I want to realize.  So stay tuned.

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What DRESS-UP Looks Like...

I always ask my clients what they want to remember about their children, what they want to preserve.  I ask them how they want their children to feel when they look back at their family photos years from now.  And I want to remember this stage of Lila's life.  Her innocence, her free spirit and her feminine ways.  Her funky sense of style, her confidence, and her independence.  I want her to look back and appreciate all those times she wanted to express herself, and that I let her do it.  Times when Mama just shook her head, smiled, and said, "Alright, you can wear the Snow White dress to the store," and she happily chirped, "Yay!"  I want her to know how much we love her and cherish the little things that make her so unique, so sweet, and so fun.

I want her to remember her carefree days of dressing up.  Forever.

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Next, please visit my sweet friend Gina Oh | Arroyo Grande Photographer for her take on our "What ____ Looks Like" project this month.  I hope you continue to follow the circle until you come back around to me.  There are 11 other extremely talented women who have wonderful stories to share with you.  Enjoy the journey!

Elevate: A Fine Art Photography Exploration | October 2011

Anyone can shoot chaos.  

But the most perceptive photographers can make compelling pictures

out of uninteresting moments. - Alex Tehrani

Stacey Woods beach portraitsI don't often get the chance to shoot just for me.  To release the ideas that I have bottled up, waiting for the right moment to play out and be realized.  But if we don't stretch creatively, then we will never grow.  To that end, I have joined another group of photographers for a second project that I'm proud to be involved in.  It's entitled, "{elevate} a fine art photography exploration".

Elevate is a blog project focused on exploring the fine art side of photography.  Each month, we will post a photo or series of images focused on art and photography.  There are no rules.  We simply post what comes from our heart and allow our inner artist a chance to explore and fly. Stacey Woods beach photographer FloridaWelcome to where my heart is.  I hope you'll be here again next month.

As it goes with my other blog project, there are several of us in the group.  We are supporting one another each and every month, and we'd like for you to take a little trip through our circle if you would.  You might discover a new favorite artist or a new way of seeing the world.  Would you continue our circle's journey, and visit my very talented friend Martha Schuster for her beautiful vision of fine art photographer this month.  She doesn't disappoint, I assure you.  Martha's work is perfectly captivating.  Enjoy...

Martha Schuster  |  i see the moon photography  |  Long Beach, CA

What Meeting Finn Looks Like

If you've been following along from last month, I've been asked to join eleven very talented women across the globe who have come together with a common goal: to capture our families in a real and beautiful way.  No posing.  No forced smiles.  Just come-as-you-are lifestyle photography (my favorite!).  I am honored to be a part of this group and look forward each month to seeing what they've posted and what beautiful snippets from their families' lives they've chosen to remember and share with us.  It's called "What ___ Looks Like", and each month we fill in the blank with a new subject or a different example of the same subject... our choice. This project has been both a challenge and a joy for me, as it forces me to grab my camera for reasons other than "work".  And thank goodness for that.  My kids certainly deserve it!

This month I'm sharing What Meeting Finn Looks Like.  (Edited to add two photos from my sister, below.  They really help tell the story of how meaningful this visit was to me.)

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Last summer my sister had a baby boy.  If you read this recent post about the newborn I'd never gotten to hold, then you'll know how excited I was to have my my beautiful sister Amy and my sweet nephew Finn come visit us from Kentucky after Charlotte was born!

This is what he looked like when I first met him in the NICU (I took this through the window)...

NICU Baby Photography

My sister took these photos from her side of the window... Parker, me and Lila.

And the smears of kisses and salty tears I left on that window, after we found out that I wasn't allowed to come into the NICU of that hospital to hold my nephew.  I nearly left my heart on that pane of glass.

This is the only way I've "seen" him since... again, through a "window"...

Huge thanks to my sweet Parker for snapping this at the airport for me... xo  (Yes, Charlotte is in there somewhere.)  :)

I finally got to hold him!!!   No more windows to separate us.  I. Love. This. Shot.  What's funnier (to me) than our babies' sweet fishy faces is that Amy and I both did this at the same time without us looking at the other one... a complete coincidence.  And we are mirroring the expressions ourselves.  We're crazy.  And very much alike, apparently!  But I think Parker has the knack for capturing the right moments, don't you??  A lifestyle photographer in training.

This was the first time we'd held each other's babies.  :)  We had a wonderful time together.  Here are a few snippets from our long (but much too short) weekend...

And of course, what is a trip to Florida without meeting the ocean for the first time?

Sweet boy.  I tried very hard to hold it together when we said goodbye at the airport.  I didn't cry in front of her, but when I got back in my car I couldn't keep in the tears any longer.  I thought I was safe since she had walked into the airport and would surely be busy with baggage and tickets and checking in, etc.  But she texted me a few minutes later saying she looked out the doors and saw me crying... and then she lost it too.  As Truvy says in Steel Magnolias, "I have a strict rule that nobody cries alone in my presence."  And that certainly applies to sisters.  Especially to sisters.

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I'd encourage you to follow this circle of women, right along with me... next up is a very talented artist named  Gina Oh |  Arroyo Grande, CA Photographer.  Last month Gina shared the beauty and laughter to be had in a simple bike ride, and I can't wait to see her sweet kids' faces again this month.  I hope you follow us.  Enjoy the journey, friends.

xo, Stacey

A Rainy Afternoon

During my pregnancy, I began turning inward quite a bit, "nesting" and preparing my home for our new little one.  Now that we have a newborn in our midst, I continue to feel that pull of home.  The need to just be present here, even if it looks to everyone else like I'm simply puttering around the house.  I feel that urge to slow down, to take things a bit easier than my full-speed 90-to-nothing pace from earlier this year.  Nowadays, laundry calls my name during all my waking hours.  Little onesies, blankets, burp cloths and diapers all beg to be washed, dried, folded and put away.  There are chores to do and little lunches to make for Lila.  Parker's bus stop reminders on my iPhone often wake me from my nursing-induced nap in the afternoon.  It's still a busy time, but it's busy in much different ways than it used to be. This day, however, was relaxed and wonderful.  No agenda.  No plans.  Nowhere to be but here.  What a lovely idea.

The perfect blanket to snuggle up and watch the drips on the windows, don't you think?

Chris and Charlotte watched a little football together.  Online.  Chris is already trying to find her a Redskins jersey/onesie to wear on game days.  We had one when Parker was a baby, but I put it up somewhere to save it, and apparently I put it up a little too well...  and now we can't find it!

And what sort of rainy day would it be without a little baking?  Lila and I made a fresh cherry cobbler.

Her first and last bite.  I have to say, she appreciated them a little more once they were cooked in a sugar syrup and baked under a crust.  Girl after my own heart.

This cobbler was absolutely delicious.  Oh it was.  I might even share the recipe with you.  It's from one of my favorite cookbooks... an autographed copy of Paula Deen's The Lady and Sons Savannah Country Cookbook.  It's a spiral-bound book, just like all of the church ladies used to sell at the fundraisers.  It's comforting to me just to flip through all the dog-eared, flour-sprinkled, sticky-finger-smudged pages.  It's well-used and well-loved, as you can see...

And this is how I cooked dinner.  This child loves the Moby Wrap.  Thank goodness for it, too.  We decided to forgo the bulky infant car seat this time around, because I really didn't want to schlep that heavy thing all over town.  Plus, germ-infested strangers are a lot less apt to try and touch your cute little baby when you're wearing her.  :)  She rides in this, this or this for now.  (Another post to come soon about baby-carriers!)  :)

After dinner and bath time, I put Charlotte to bed and the older two continued to be their goofy selves in the kitchen.  Pardon the way they're dressed.  This is real life, is it not?  This is the preferred weekend attire for my two, and is more than typical if you knock on my door on a lazy weekend afternoon.

*Sidenote: If you follow me on Facebook, you'll know that Lila wears this purple Rapunzel costume just about every day.  She wears it around the house, she plays catch with Parker in the backyard in it, she wears it to Target and to the grocery store.  I pick my battles with this one, and I choose not to fight over this!  The Rapunzel dress has been mended twice, and this week I'll have to stitch it up again because it's unraveling in two more places.  But that is to be expected with a garment that is worn everywhere, everyday, for a month.

Anyhow, I love these photos partially because she's wearing that funny little dress.  It will always remind me of this stage in her childhood.

Then the four of us played Sorry on the coffee table.  Parker won, as usual, and Lila made up her own rules, as usual.  Some snuggling, two sweet bedtime prayers, one more drink of water, a few tears... and our lazy rainy day was confirmed a success.  Can't wait for the next one.

What would you choose to remember from YOUR rainy afternoons?  I'd love it if you posted about it on your own blog!  Include a photo of course, and please link back here in the comments.  I would love to see how others spend their rainy weekends.  Do you bake cobbler and play board games?  Do laundry and read magazines?  Or do you grab an umbrella and run outside in the middle of it all?

The Chic Critique Forum

I remember participating in a popular photography forum several years ago when I first began shooting.  It was a wonderfully helpful forum filled with photographers of all skill levels; lots of people participated and shared their images and gave/received feedback and critique.  A lot of the feedback was really helpful, and forced me to open my eyes and view my images on a more technical level instead of an artistic one (ya gotta know the rules in order to break them, right?).

After awhile, as my work improved, I began to get comments like "Great shot!", "So stinkin' cute!" or "Love it!", or the ever-popular "I lurrrrve it!" (anyone remember that one?!).  While sweet words like that were (and still are) wonderful to hear (and so good for the ego, lol)... I felt that these compliments weren't necessarily the truth.  I longed for honest critique again.  Someone to tell me flat-out that my highlights were blown to smithereens and my shadows were completely blocked.  Or to offer helpful advice, for instance, if I had turned my subject a few degrees more toward the light, I could have brightened up her eyes or lightened the shadows alongside her cheek.  Give it to me straight!  I know beyond a shadow of a doubt hat I could have improved my technique faster if someone had simply told me the truth about my work.

Well, enter the Chic Critique Forum!  It's a wonderful new resource that focuses on giving photographers HONEST critique on their work.  What's it really worth to you, to have honest and helpful feedback on your photography?  To have another set of eyes to view your work, someone help you figure out what your images might be lacking.  What could make them a little bit better, what could make them stand out and shine?  I say $59 is a steal for something as valuable as the future of your art and your business.

I'm thrilled to be a part of this amazing group of "Celebrity" Photographers who are offering our honest critique to help your images improve.  Sign up HERE for my 4-Week Critique, and also become a part of a fabulous forum that will continue to help you and your photography business blossom and grow!  My class is only $59 and begins on Monday, October 3.  I can't wait to chat with you and help your images become better than ever.  See you soon!

Lifestyle: Your Style Mini-Workshop is Back on the Bloom Forum!

I'm slowly easing into work again.  I'm not yet ready to leave my tiny baby girl behind and begin shooting just yet... but I am offering my third installment of Lifestyle: Your Style, a Mini-Workshop for Photographers, over on The Bloom Forum from Monday October 3 to Friday October 14.  You must be a member of The Bloom Forum to participate, and you must live/shoot at least 120 miles away from Tampa Bay in order to be eligible to take the course.  This will be the last mini-workshop I offer in 2011, so jump in now if you're interested! Thirty (30) Active Memberships and ten (10) Silent Memberships will be offered this time around.  Active Members will receive a beautiful ebook filled with the course material, my philosophy on the lifestyle approach, an explanation of my own shooting methods and session techniques, two assignments to complete at your own pace during the course, a client questionnaire sample to help you prequalify your clients, and a couple of other goodies to help you integrate this lifestyle approach into your own work.  Active members can fully participate in the course, submit images for critique and feedback within our private area of the forum, and receive feedback (from myself and the other students) on the assignments submitted.  Each Active Membership is just $200.

Silent Members pay $150, and receive all of the above EXCEPT feedback and critique on images and assignments.  Silent memberships are read-only, no active participation is allowed at this level.  You're still welcome to read and follow along with the class in the forum area, however.

Lifestyle: Your Style is held online and is truly a work-at-your-own-pace opportunity.  You need not be online or logged into the forum every night; nor do I ask you to submit any of your assignments by a certain deadline.  You're free to do the course work at your own leisure during the two weeks we have together.

Seats always fill quickly, so don't wait!  Take the Lifestyle: Your Style Mini-Workshop if you want to discover new techniques to use during your Holiday Family Sessions this Fall.  (We all know you're tired of those forced-smile posed images on the Holiday cards, right?)  We're going to have a blast together.

SO HEAD ON OVER TO THE BLOOM FORUM!  You'll love it... the women there are beyond helpful and so inspiring!  Once you're a member of Bloom, you can register for the mini-workshop right there within the forum.  If you have any questions about the forum itself or about the mini-workshop, let me know.  See you there!

*Affiliate links are utilized in this post.

What Three Looks Like

I long to have what you have, dear clients.  Photographs of my family hugging and loving and laughing and being together.  ON MY WALLS.  Not just on my hard drive.  It's what spurred my interest in photography back in 2005, and what inspired me to create this business of mine.  Sadly, I don't have nearly as many of those sweet photographs on my walls as I ought to, being a professional photographer and all.  You know the story of the cobbler's children who had no shoes?  Well, this cobbler has made many shoes for her children, but they're all in boxes instead of on their feet.  Or rather, they are sitting on hard drives instead of in albums and gracing the walls of our home.  

 

photo courtesy of my fabulous midwife, Vikki Bennett at Breath of Life (thank you for grabbing my big "scary" camera and snapping this for me!!  xo)

I’ve been lucky to have met so many incredibly talented and wonderful photographers during this journey.  People who share the same desire to capture their own families in a real and beautiful way.  I’m teaming up with eleven of these women on a very personal and meaningful project called, “What ________ Looks Like.”

Our goal is to capture our own families in a real and beautiful way.  Some people call it “lifestyle”, some call it “real life”, "documentary", and some call it “unposed”.  No matter what you call it, our desire is to snatch the moments that represent the relationships, the dynamics, the reality, the beauty, the truth, and the life of our families and record them here on our blogs as well as in print at the end of the project.

Each month we will each choose to fill in the blank with our word of choice.  Some of us may choose to use the same word all year and some may choose to change it up each month.  We will each link to the next photographer until our circle of 12 is complete.

We hope this project inspires you to take more pictures of your own families so that those unique moments that make your family unique will never be lost or forgotten.

xoxo

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What THREE Looks Like...

Lila is home with me now, instead of in daycare, throughout the remainder of my maternity leave.  This is her, for most of the hours of the day.  She calls to Charlotte in her singsong voice, she cups her sister's tiny face with her chubby hands, and she says so sweetly... "Hellooo Sweet Honey!  Hi baby-guhl (girl).  How's my tiny baby?"  And other little nicknames she picks up from me from day to day.  She's so truly interested in this little one, and it blesses my heart to see her showing her love in this delicate way.  She kisses her head and cheeks no fewer than 50 times per day.  Every day.  Charlotte is so lucky.  So blessed.

My first little love, holding my last little love.  This is Parker's routine as soon as he comes home from school: put backpack away, wash hands, hold Charlotte.  He pats her little head when he gets off the bus and into the car, and always comments on how cute she looks.  He really adores her.  He's been interested in all things baby since I found out I was expecting again... which proves both rewarding and uncomfortable (on my part) due to some very curious questions during this time!  (Lord give me strength to explain these details in a way he can understand at his level!)  But he's the sweetest big brother, and has vowed to protect "both of his girls" from here on out.  Mean kids, you've been warned.

 

He's had quite the transition this week... he was supposed to begin second grade on the morning his littlest sister was born.  Sadly, we skipped the first day (we had yet to be released from the birthing center), so he started a day late.  New sister, new teacher, new classes, new friends.  All in the span of a day.  A bit scattered and unfocused this week, with a few naughty spells thrown in, but that is to be expected, I suppose, with all of these changes happening at once.

And this, why, this is my view at any given time.  Every two to three hours I look down and see this.  Charlotte's teeny outstretched legs on my lap as I nurse her.  Sweet, curled-up baby toes.  Little white t-shirts, bare bellies and the tiniest of newborn diapers.  The beginnings of chubby fat rolls on her thighs and knees.  My own legs outstretched on the ottoman to relieve the last bit of swelling in my ankles.  This is reality.

This is what THREE looks like.

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I strongly encourage you to visit the next photographer's blog in our very talented circle of women.  I have the pleasure of introducing Gina Oh  |  Arroyo Grande, CA Photographer and her beautiful photos of her sweet children (one of whom is named Charlotte as well!).  I hope you enjoy her words and images as much as I do.  At the end of her blog post, you'll discover another link to a new photographer and her perspective on "What ____ Looks Like", and so the circle continues.  Visit them all, and soak up the beauty of this project and our pride in it.

Enjoy the journey, friends.  Be blessed,

Stacey

 

 

 

Lifestyle: Your Style | A Mini-Workshop on The Bloom Forum

Good morning!  I'm excited to announce Round Two of my Mini-Workshop, Lifestyle: Your Style, that is being held online within The Bloom Forum from May 16 through 27.  You must be a member of The Bloom Forum to participate in the course, so GO HERE to sign up if you're not yet a member!  (Or you may click on the Bloom Forum affiliate button at the bottom of my blog.) Want to know what all is included in Lifestyle: Your Style?  Take a look!

Lifestyle Photography Workshop Tampa

You can sign up as either an Active or Silent Member, whichever works best for you.  Active Seats are $200 each and Silent Seats are $150 for the entire two week course.  Silent Members receive all the same materials and assignments as the Active Members, however they will be unable to post their assignment results for my critique in the forum.  It will be a "read-only" workshop for the Silent participants.

Also, this is truly a work-at-your-own-pace course, so don't feel as if you have to be on the forum any particular time each day, or any specific days at all.  Personally, I will be on the forum each evening to give feedback, offer critique and advice, post assignments and answer any questions you might have. I can't wait to meet you.  :)

 

ETA:  As of Friday, May 13, all active and silent spots are full!  I'm opening up a few more silent memberships if you'd still like to sign on, but you must register by tomorrow (Saturday, May 14)!

ETA:  Wow.  I have no words.  We're more than sold out, and have more amazing photographers than I ever anticipated signing up!  We're about double the size of the first course and I'm more than thrilled at the response.  After chatting with the girls at Bloom, it appears very likely be having another mini-workshop at Bloom later this fall (depends on when my little girl makes her entrance into the world), so please comment below or email me if you'd like to be added to our waitlist.  Thanks so very much, everyone!  Truly, it's an honor.  xxoo

34 Things I've Learned

I'm turning 34 today.  And I cannot think of a better place to be in my life.  I've been so blessed, not with so much material things (although we have our fair share of "stuff", don't worry) but with things that money cannot buy.  For my Five on Friday today (and to make up for being so horribly slack on the past few Fridays where you've literally gotten Zero on Friday, lol) I'd like to submit my 34 Things today.  34 Things That I've Learned in 34 Years on this great green Earth.

34

So here goes...  Bless you if you're patient and read them all.  ;)  Bonus points if you nod your head in agreement with any of them.

1|  I did not need to look for love.  It found me.  Quite a surprise, actually, but that's how the best things happen, don't you think?  When you're not trying too hard?

2|  Never regret mistakes you've made.  All of the mistakes I've made (especially the embarrassing ones) have taught me a lesson, and my experiences in life have shaped me into the woman I am today.  I wouldn't want to be anyone else right now, even if I had the opportunity.

3|  Don't wait to tell that person you love them.  We are never guaranteed tomorrow.  Say it today, even if it takes a lot of effort on your part.  Do it anyway.

4|  Take pleasure in small things.  Really, the very smallest.  They can have the biggest impact on your attitude.

5|  Don't forget where you came from.  See, you can take the girl out of Kentucky.  And even if she chooses not to make her life there as an adult, it doesn't mean that she doesn't love the people who raised her from the bottom of her heart, or that she doesn't appreciate the lessons she learned as a girl, the values that were instilled in her, or that she doesn't close her eyes every once in a while and remember the way the cool bluegrass felt under her bare feet.  You can never, ever take the Kentucky out of the girl.  And really... why would you want to?  :)

6|  Giving someone something you made with your own hands feels wonderful.

7|  Giving someone something you bought with your own hard earned money feels wonderful too.

8|  If your children cannot get along with each other, take my mother's example.... make those kids share a room.  My two sisters and I can attest (multiple times) that this method works wonders.  The two that are arguing most will spend so much darn quality time together that they'll have no choice but to get along.  And possibly gang up on the other sister, resulting in then sharing a room with her instead.  I slept with a pillow behind my back for months after I moved from my parents' home.  That full-sized bed seemed so big after sharing it with a sister for years.  :)

9|  If you do have siblings, thank God for them every day.  (Even when you're sharing a room.)  Because one day, when you are pregnant with your first child, one of them will change her airline flight every day for two weeks to make sure she's at your side on the very day you give birth.  And on your 34th birthday, the other one will go and do something like this and make you sob like a baby.  Truly, I am the luckiest girl in the world for growing up with such sweetness in my life to this day.

10|  Enjoy what each season brings.  Snow.  Crisp leaves.  Warm sand.  Soft grass.  Someday you might move to Florida and beg for soft grass and crisp leaves, instead of crisp grass and soft leaves!  (New Florida transplants are raising their hands right about now, cringing at being barefoot on St. Augustine grass.)

11|  Be grateful for opportunities that come your way.  I believe that everything happens for a reason, and I know that one choice can alter a life completely.  So glad for the choices that have altered mine.

12|  As far as birthday gifts go, there isn't anything better than a homemade card from your babies, and for your husband to take you out to dinner so that there is no prep or cleanup involved.  I need nothing more to be happy than my sweet family.  No jewelry can outshine those handmade crafts and some quality time.

13|  Songs can bring back wonderful memories.  And sad ones.  And funny ones.  (And for the record, I really miss mixed-tapes.)  :)

14|  A venti peppermint mocha can brighten the cloudiest of days (y'all knew I'd sneak a Starbucks in there, didn't ya?).

15|  Cherish friendships like they are gold.  Platinum, even.  Nurture them and be thankful for those special people in your life.  True friends are rare these days.

16|  There is always enough time for one more kiss before bed.  Or two more.  Or ten more.  Be grateful they want that affection from you, and give it freely.

17|  Lying in the sun, on a warm beach, and being able to relax so deeply that you fall asleep.... is a glorious thing.  Unless you're a mother.  If your children are with you on that beach, you know that you can't take your eyes off them for a second.  But watching your children laugh when the surf laps their toes, or watching them chase seagulls until everyone on the beach is laughing too, is a glorious thing in and of itself.  And so much more amazing than any hour of slumber on the sand.

18|  Speaking of slumber, when you bring your baby home from the hospital, heed the advice of those wise mothers who say, "Sleep while the baby sleeps."  Seriously.  Those dishes can wait.

19|  The sound of a newborn baby's first cry is quite possibly the sweetest sound in the world.  Fall in love with it.  For when they are two years old, they begin to whine on a constant basis and it's not so sweet anymore.  (Not that I know anything about that, of course.)

20|  Never forget to say, "thank you".  And, "please".  And most importantly, "I'm sorry".  Even when it's not your fault.

21|  Have at least one go-to dinner menu with all those ingredients consistently in your pantry.  Learn how to bake a homemade birthday cake, from scratch.  Find out what his absolute favorite recipes are, and perfect them.  Memorize the number for your local pizzeria just in case none of the above turns out well.  ;)

22|  There is beauty in light, and in shadow.  And you cannot have one without the other.  Learn to love them both equally.

23|  Even when you have no makeup on, your hair is a mess, and you haven't had a shower all day, your children still think you're beautiful and they love you anyway.  This isn't a trick.  It's a gift that God gives us to make up for #17 above.

24|  If someone offers to help you, by all means, let them help.

25|  If you see someone who needs your help, and you're able to, then by all means, help them.

26|  Most men (ahem, husbands, to be specific) want you to tell them exactly what you want.  Subtlety is a complete waste of your time and energy.  Be very kind about it, but tell them exactly what you need from them.  Write it down if you have to.  (Trust me on this one.  Otherwise, you'll end up with a Lane Bryant gift card for Christmas when you are a size 2.  That was a fun return.)

27|  A Daddy will never forget if someone has broken the heart of his daughter.  Mamas don't forget either.

28|  You can never have too many books.  Always too many toys, but never enough books.

29|  Chocolate should be eaten often and without apology.

30|  The best thing you can spend on your children is TIME.

31|  When your kids are sick, just take it for granted that you're going to get sick too.  Take an extra dose of vitamins and then curl up with them on the couch.  Do not hold back attention and touch from them; snuggles are the best medicine and it will make you both feel better anyhow.

32|  God will not give you more than you can bear.  Rather, no more than He can help you bear.  You're truly not alone.

33|  Love what they love.  Learn their love language and speak it to them.  Spend time doing things that they think are important, not necessarily what you think is.  Everything is significant.

34|  Try something new.  Even if it is five states away and means you'll have to sacrifice something you love.  You never know what wonders await when you leap without knowing if the net is there.

Maybe next year I'll have 35 Things to share with you.  ;)

10.10.10 Wedding ~ Angela + Michael

So, I'm not a wedding photographer.  And I tried to convince Angela of this.  I think I tried to talk her out of it, if you want to know the honest truth.  ;)  But Angela has been a long-time friend to Chris and me, such a wonderful supporter of my little photography business, and Parker just adores her son Zach.  How could I say no to her?  Well, at least without giving her fair warning that I truly wasn't a wedding photographer and is she absolutely sure she wants ME?!  Still, despite my fear and my apprehensiveness, she trusted me.  She had faith in me and confidence that I would document their day in my unique perspective, with my own eye. And guess what?  I love her for it.  I loved the entire experience and had a wonderful time.  Angela and Michael were naturals in front of the camera (of course, since they own a film production company), and made my job that day feel almost easy.  (Not to mention that she is stunningly beautiful and they are both extremely photogenic.)  I am honored that I was able to be there not only to photograph her marriage to Michael on 10.10.10, but to witness my sweet friend marry her best friend.  And I'm more than grateful for that.

They were married at the beautiful Cafe Alma in downtown St. Petersburg, FL.  The atmosphere was intimate, warm, inviting, elegant, and amazing.  Such a gorgeous venue, and the staff was fabulous from beginning to end.  Lindsey Matacchiero made Angela look even more stunning with hair and makeup.

Stacey Woods Photography Weddings

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the wedding kissTheir two sons were by their side during the ceremony.  These little guys couldn't look more different on the outside... but inside their hearts, they've been brothers for a long time now.brothers1

michael and angela rocha weddingAfter the ceremony, we took to the streets of St. Petersburg to play in the setting sun.  You know me and my beloved backlight... especially at sunset!  ;)  These are some of my favorites from the entire evening, so forgive me if I share more than a few!  There was very little editing done on the color images here... the light was just warm, gorgeous, and perfect.St Petersburg Wedding Photographer

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Clearwater Wedding Photographer Stacey Woods

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first danceI wish I could post the whole wedding!  There are so many more that I'd love to share here.  Michael and Angela, thank you so very much for entrusting me with your amazing, most perfect wedding day!  Sweet wishes and congratulations your way.

And dare I say.... I think I could get used to shooting weddings.  :)

xo,

Stacey