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  • Hi, I'm Tamara Lackey and on this episode of reDefine show for AdoramaTV

  • I speak with Grand Award winner, newborn photographer Kelly Brown, about how she

  • stands out in a pretty crowded genre, how she gets the inspiration for her work, why

  • she's built such a structured flow to what she does when she's shooting and

  • what's next for her. Check it out.

  • AdoramaTV presents 'The reDefine show' with Tamara Lackey.

  • Hi Kelly, thank you for joining me.

  • It's great to be here.

  • Yes, you came all the way here for this talk from Australia.

  • Yeah, I did. Just for this.

  • Just for our little web series interview .

  • Thank you. You have your practice in Australia but you are internationally

  • known for your work with newborn photography.

  • Yeah, it's actually amazing. I get stopped everywhere I go saying I love

  • your work, and I have no idea how they see it.

  • You're like what? How did you know this? And how long have you been shooting?

  • This will be my thirteenth year.

  • OK, like how did you say, yes this is what I'm going to do? Not only get started in photography but moving very

  • specifically into the genre of newborn photography.

  • I had a friend who had a baby and I had been doing photography and they said, you know, would I take some

  • photos and I really didn't know what I was doing. I had no idea. I'd been

  • looking at photos on Flickr, on the internet and books and things like that

  • so I went along and I took some photos that I thought were great at the time.

  • And then you look back that, yeah, I know that.

  • and it was so challenging, but like, because babies are so unpredictable

  • that during the process I just really enjoyed it and then I started to do more. More of my

  • friends were having babies and yes it was just kind of a bit of a snowball effect.

  • Yeah and so is that mostly what you do or is it all that you do?

  • It's pretty much all I do now in terms of my business with my clients, so I focus on one photography.

  • So I have to ask you this, when you are somebody who is setting kind of a look that a lot of people are doing

  • now like a style and you're really showing exactly how to do it and such, how do you do that and stand out?

  • You know it's tough, because, you know, there's so many

  • photographers now and everybody is inspired by other photographers and

  • they are buying all their props and materials that they're using from the same places and

  • a lot of places sell the same things

  • There's no there's no barrier to entry.

  • Anybody can come in and get these things. That's right. I suppose when it comes to

  • the styling of my sessions to sort of give them a look and feel that I love,

  • it's finding things from the unique places, you know and I'll look outside of prop shops

  • and things like that. I'll go to fabric stores. I will, you know, have certain

  • things made specifically for me or I'll be in antique shops and hardware stores

  • and find little things that I can sort of introduce into my shoots and they're

  • one offs, which is great so that means that, you know, my images will start to sort of have their own

  • unique sort of look and feel.

  • I remember last year at a print competition, I didn't know

  • at the time it was your print, but your print came up and it was the ginormous

  • flower. What was that exactly?

  • Oh, God, that was that was kind of crazy because I was

  • looking through a fashion magazine and there was this woman wearing a yellow

  • shirt and it was I think for a spring collection and there was this giant, white flower

  • behind her in the image and at the time I thought that would be kind of cool so I just

  • took a picture of it with my phone

  • and then it was a couple of months later, I was going through the photos on my

  • phone. I saw it again and I thought I'm going to make that. I'm going to challenge myself to make a

  • giant flower so we recorded the process

  • of making the flower and it is part of one of my Creative Life classes.

  • Oh lovely. So what did you do?

  • Yeah, so I just got sheets of foam core and I'm not actually sure of the name

  • of it but it's like the underlay that you put under your carpet when you lay carpet.

  • Oh yeah, like a rug mat? Rug protector?

  • Yeah and I just used that to create the flower. I created a pattern from the photograph

  • and enlarged it and yeah, it was good.

  • It was an exquisit photo too, like so well done.

  • Well it was different and it's funny, because, you know, as we talk about trends and things

  • like that, you know, it starts to sort of make other people think 'I would love to do that.'

  • I am going to have the giant flower photo yeah and you see that a lot. You do see that

  • duplicated and triplicated etc and then what about photographing multiples?

  • You definitely have worked with twins and triplets and, you know, how are you

  • finding that different than working with just a newborn?

  • You're trying to get them to look comfortable together, is always a challenge and for me as a photographer, you

  • know, I'm thinking about what it is that my clients want, the specific things.

  • They want timeless images, they want their baby to be the center of the photograph, you know, the main sort of

  • subject of the image and they want timeless images that look

  • comfortable of their baby and you see so many photos of babies looking uncomfortable so the

  • challenge with working with multiples is how do you get them together to look comfortable?

  • All at the same time?

  • Yeah and I have twins of my own so it's always been a bit of fun

  • photographing them when they were babies

  • and now I get to meet other multiple mums and come up with

  • unique images for them. It's kind of cool.

  • Is it just a matter of either infinite patience which,

  • maybe mixed in, with like certain, you know, hey if I put them this way they seem

  • to calm down, is it a combination of that?

  • Yeah, definitely. Patience is key. I mean

  • you'll have one baby sound asleep and the others wide awake or what have you, so

  • during the shoot, like, I'll work with them however they are, like I don't sort of go in with a

  • plan, like I'm going to do this, this and this. Instead I just wait for the both of them

  • to be sleep and then I'll photograph them together and I'll look at the way that

  • they sort of naturally lie. How they move and then yeah, sort of work with them and

  • what they're comfortable with.

  • Yeah, kind of whatever approaches you, you deal with.

  • Yeah and a lot of the times, you know, certain things that I do are influenced by my clients because I always

  • want to create images that they love so I'm not going to, sort of, go in to shoot and say right I would

  • like to do this for you today because they might not like that so I

  • get as much input from them as possible about what they love and always ask them if they've

  • seen something like and then we'll create something specifically for them.

  • What is the average length of time for one of your shoots?

  • I tell my client's 2-4 hours but I'm sort

  • of around the two to 2 1/2 hours at the moment, you know it allows them to sort of come in, relax.

  • They've got the expectation, yeah.

  • And yeah I just give them room to move, like room to breathe because when you have a new baby

  • you've got...like, everything changes and you're coming to a new place, new environment for a shoot and you're

  • anxious, you're nervous, you're about to hand your brand new baby over to someone that you've just met.

  • So I allow that little bit of extra time just to make sure that they're nice and relaxed and calm.

  • Yeah that's smart. What's the longest you've ever done? What's the longest it's ever taken?

  • Four and a half hours and that was with triplets.

  • Yeah it would be.

  • Three babies.

  • That's funny. From a business perspective obviously being able to be so successful,

  • what would you feel like are the things that have helped you really separate

  • yourself in terms of having a smarter business?

  • You know for me I have to work smarter not harder, so you know what it's like. We get busy and if

  • you're not pricing yourself right, if you're not marketing yourself right then you know it

  • just becomes chaotic so it's putting the right sort of structures and systems in place to make sure

  • everything sort of runs smoothly but yeah I think...

  • Are you doing that yourself? Do you have a team?

  • Yeah it's pretty much just me. My husband does all the money, the sort of dollar side of things. He looks

  • after all my book keeping

  • That's nice. That's convenient.

  • I was doing it and I just didn't enjoy it and I didn't fully

  • understand, you know, everything that I could do from a business perspective

  • and understanding, you know, the Tax system and things like that. It was...

  • He just understands it. It was smart just to say right you look after that and I'll do all the other side of things.

  • And do your work with assistants on your shoots?

  • No I don't. I have parents actually help me.

  • OK, you're just kind of 'hey, since you're here anyway for a few hours...'

  • Yeah and they love being part of the process

  • and there's nothing worse than a parent sort of sitting back and feeling a little helpless or kind of

  • just wondering what's going on and

  • not being a part of it and I suppose it's the key to how successful I've become is

  • because my clients have such incredible experiences that they tell everyone about it so

  • when it comes to setting yourself apart you know you want your clients to be able to tell everyone

  • about their experience and how unique it was and how good it made them feel.

  • And for newborn portraits what kind of variety would you say deliver

  • after the shoot? Would you say that there's maybe one pose multiple times,

  • 3 or 4 poses?

  • Do you feel...is that something that you go into with the mindset of I'm going to deliver

  • it this way or is it just we'll see what happens?

  • Yeah I definitely have like a session workflow so I know I can do, you know, say

  • for example, four poses on a posing bag and I'm going to get eleven shots. I offer my clients 20

  • images after the shoot so then I know that I'm going to go into doing a couple of

  • props, things like that and I'm going to do parents shots so at the end of the shoot...

  • So you're following a flow?

  • Yeah I have like a structure and then like I have a back up plan because if the baby's awake...

  • Everything's gone wrong! Plan B!

  • When the baby's awake and not sleeping I'll sort of shift things around and

  • maybe do a bit back-to-back, but I'm sort of planning on doing probably about

  • six to seven set ups with the baby to get my 20 images.

  • OK what is the most challenging part of newborn photography?

  • Oh, it's just... I think it's the having the patience and

  • the challenges trying not to put too many expectations on yourself because

  • you know I think today photographers go in, they see the beautiful photos, they

  • go in, they want to create them and then they feel like they can't do it. It's just learning to go easy

  • on yourself, I think. We often put too many expectations on ourselves so we have to slow down

  • Amen.

  • And work with the baby and deliver what our client wants. Not worrying about what other photographers

  • are doing or whether or not a photographer will like the images that we create

  • because businesses aren't based around other photographers unless, of course, you have a product

  • In which case it's kind of built around them.

  • But when you're working for your clients, it's whether or not they love the images and

  • that's what's important so yeah, try not to have too many expectations. At the beginning of every shoot

  • I take the baby and I sit for probably two minutes and I just touch it and I see how it responds to

  • my touch and then I know how it reacts, how I need to be able to work with it for the rest of the session

  • That's awesome. So you do... It's funny. I do something similar with

  • children. It's obviously very, very different but I just kind of more like feel the

  • energy, which sounds like what you're doing as well but more like

  • interaction and such. So you obviously are doing a fair amount of teaching as well.

  • Tell us about the baby summit. What is this?

  • So I came up with this idea about two years ago now to create like a retreat for photographers and there are

  • a lot of photographers out there that don't know where to go for the right

  • information and they're learning from the wrong places, so we decided to put

  • together a three-day event and

  • became bigger than what we ever expected . We had 300 attendees in Australia last year.

  • Oh wonderful.

  • 20 speakers and some of my amazing friends

  • came out and spoke and it was incredible, so after that we were like

  • well we need to do this again and with that we had a lot a response from the US and now we're bringing

  • Let's go to another continent!

  • I know! So we're going to be in Atlanta, October 1st, 2nd and 3rd and we have 33 speakers.

  • Wow, that's a full on thing.

  • It's insane. It's insane.

  • So baby summit is not actually a summit for babies?

  • Nope. It's for, basically, newborn, maternity, birth and older baby photographers.

  • So birth photography too?

  • Yeah, which has become quite popular

  • It really has.

  • But what we wanted to focus on, because a lot of new photographers enter the baby genres,

  • family and baby genres, they're not getting the right information in terms of setting up

  • their business, so the summit focuses on the posing side of things and all of

  • that, but we also have book keepers, we have accountants coming in to speak, we have lawyers come

  • in, we have like specialized people from all different types of businesses come

  • in and present to help people set themselves up.

  • It's very well rounded.

  • We even have a time management specialist coming to present so...mums.

  • Drop the baby summit mic. Is that a...what's the website for that?

  • So it's just thebabysummit.com.

  • OK, excellent and if people want to find out more about you they go to...

  • I have a Facebook page and a website. It's just Little Pieces Photography.

  • OK, so website is Little Pieces Photography

  • Facebook's Little Pieces Photography, and how about Twitter?

  • Yes it's @kabrown77.

  • Alright, perfect. Thank you so much for your time.

  • You're welcome, thank you for having me.

  • Thanks so much Kelly. Join me here next time on AdoramaTV and don't forget to

  • subscribe to AdoramaTV for the sea of educational content.

Hi, I'm Tamara Lackey and on this episode of reDefine show for AdoramaTV

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ケリー・ブラウンとの新生児写真タマララッキーとreDefineショー (Newborn Photography with Kelly Brown: The reDefine Show with Tamara Lackey)

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