“Where we love is home, home where our feet may leave, but not our hearts.”
– Oliver Wendell Holmes
Jodie Byrne
Celina Bailey
Michelle McDaid
Erika Roa
Lacey Monroe
Robin Stephenson
“Where we love is home, home where our feet may leave, but not our hearts.”
– Oliver Wendell Holmes
Jodie Byrne
Celina Bailey
Michelle McDaid
Erika Roa
Lacey Monroe
Robin Stephenson
Lacey is from Portland, Oregon, has a background in fine art, and is one of the co-founders of Sham of the Perfect. She has two little kiddos and one big dog.
Where can we find you online (Website, Facebook, Instagram)?
www.laceymonroephotography.com/
https://www.facebook.com/laceymonroephotography
https://instagram.com/laceymonroe/
What’s your favorite lens for shooting this type of work? And do you have any accessories you just love (filter, bag, camera strap, etc.)?
I have spent a lot of time (and way too much money) figuring out what I like to shoot with (here’s to buying used gear and selling it again when I’m over it!). My kit is definitely a lot more streamlined at this point, although there are still a few hanger-oners that I am debating cutting ties with (a lens or two and some old camera bodies). My go to lenses these days are my Sigma 35mm Art and my Canon 50mm L. I love primes and the ability to shoot wide open at 1.4 or 1.2 respectively. I also find the more normal focal lengths of the 50 and 35 are well suited for storytelling photography.
I don’t have a ton of accessories. However, I did just back a kickstarter for a new camera bag that looks like it should be pretty rad, which is great since I don’t really love any the my current bags. I love my holdfast moneymaker for when I’m shooting with two bodies (such as at weddings or when I am shooting hybrid during a family session).
What are you drawn to document? Is there a particular composition, technique, or mood you love?
I’m always trying document the authentic.
I know, I know, it is totally the buzzword of the day and every photographer out there says the same thing, but, dammit, I mean it! I want real. I want truth. I want to capture what makes a family tick- what makes them unique and strange and special. I want to capture the little routines and mundanities of life that in the moment you might not appreciate, but when the kids are grown they are the bits of life that you will wind up missing the most. It’s not the big moments and milestones that are the pulsing heart of the family; it’s the everyday activities that shape who we are and make up the true history of us.
What is the most valuable tip you have learned in pursuit of shooting in a more documentary style?
The best tip I have learned is also something I constantly struggle with and that is to trust yourself.
Trust your vision. Be yourself. Find your voice and identify what you want to say with your photography. It’s really hard to not just chase the likes and only post things you think will be well received by the masses. It’s tough. I know. I get it. It is all too easy to constantly compare and photo stalk others, even though it ends up being a loop where you just feel worse and worse about yourself and the work you are producing. Stop being a pale imitation of others and produce work that makes your heart sing. It’s something I strive to achieve day after day. Some days I win and actually feel good about the work I’m producing, but other days I fail and hate every photograph I’ve taken and am pretty sure I should probably just quit. Know that those feelings are 100% normal and every artists feels them; the key is to just keep going and try not to give too much room in your head and heart for those negative thoughts to fester and grow. Of course, this advice applies no matter what style you shoot in, but that does not negate its importance to storytelling photographers, especially since the popular pinterest-y poses are far cry from documentary style photography.
Why is storytelling photography important to you? Why do you feel compelled to shoot with this approach?
Storytelling photography is important to me because I want to create something that is more than a pretty picture. That is not to say that I don’t want my work to be beautiful, because I absolutely do. I also want it to be funny and raw and full of love and laughter and little details and overarching narratives and all of that is so much more than pretty. Something can be beautiful without being pretty. In fact, I think the overlap of pretty and beautiful is pretty rare. That’s not to say I haven’t taken my share of pretty pictures- pretty light, pretty poses, pretty smiles… and all of it vapid, empty, and forced. I’m over it. Those photos don’t elicit any feelings. They don’t make me think. They don’t cause me to look at it again and again in an attempt to really try to see the photo. They are just pretty and, for me, that is no longer enough. Storytelling moves beyond pretty and the more I shoot in this style the more it speaks to me as an artist and as a mother.
Briefly tell us about your journey into family documentary photography.
My undergraduate degrees are in Art and Art History from the University of Oregon (Go Ducks!). It was there that I had my first photography course (it was all film, because I am old like that), but it wasn’t until studying abroad my junior year that photography really grabbed hold of me. After college I tried selling my photos, but really had no idea what I was doing. While my art classes taught me all about techniques, materials, and methodologies, there was never any real discussion of how you monetize your work. So I tried, failed, and gave up. I went back to school to become a public Montessori teacher and spent the new few years in the classroom, while keeping photography as a hobby. I took a year off from teaching with the birth of my son (Judah, you can see him all over my weekly Sham of the Perfect photos). It was during this time that I decided to try again to monetize my photography. This time I had resources and connections that I could turn to for business advice, something that was severely lacking on my first go around. Another major difference is that this time I was marketing myself as a portrait photographer, instead of trying to sell “fine art” photographs (trust me, if you saw those old images you would understand why the quotation marks are necessary). My style has definitely evolved and been refined through the years. At first I shot everything and anything clients threw at me (weddings and seniors and boudoir, oh my!), but over time I found that storytelling and documentary family photography was my happy place. Since opening my business we have moved (a few times) and I had baby number two (Shosh, who also has a starring role in my Sham of the Perfect images). The years have gone by in bit of a blur, but I remain excited about photography and the direction my business is headed as a storytelling family photographer.
“The purpose of life, after all, is to live it, to taste experience to the utmost, to reach out eagerly and without fear for newer and richer experience.”
– Eleanor Roosevelt
Jodie Byrne
Vicki Hull
Heather Bowser
Michelle McDaid
Lacey Monroe
Robin Stephenson
Elisa Elliot
Erika Roa
Jessica Uhler
Chrystal Cienfuegos
Kym Vitar
Jenny Rusby
Celina Bailey
Gemma Robillard
Natasha Kelly
“Never lose sight of the fact that just being is fun.”
– Katharine Hepburn
Vicki Hull
Celina Bailey
Gemma Robillard
Lacey Monroe
Natasha Kelly
Jenny Rusby
Jodie Byrne
Elisa Elliot
Chrystal Cienfuegos
Erika Roa
Robin Stephenson
Kym Vitar
Heather Bowser
Michelle McDaid
Vicki is Sham’s European representative. She is from Littlecote, Buckinghamshire in the United Kingdom and loves capturing the variety of her families’ everyday moments.
Where can we find you online (Website, Facebook, Instagram)?www.vickihullphotography.com
http://www.facebook.com/vickihullphotography
http://www.instagram.com/vickihullpics
What’s your favorite lens for shooting this type of work? And do you have any accessories you just love (filter, bag, camera strap, etc.)?
I only have 2 lenses, a 24mm 2.8 and a 50mm 1.4 which I used to use all the time. Now when I’m at home and with my family I use my 24mm ninety percent of the time. It is a battered old second hand lens but I love how much space it gives me so I can really try to get the whole story in the frame. I am also really trying to work on my composition and this helps me to really consider what is in, or out, of the frame. It isn’t a great quality lens and when I’m shooting for others I tend to use my sharper 50mm 1.4. I’m saving up for a new wide angle lens.
What are you drawn to document? Is there a particular composition, technique, or mood you love?
At the moment I am documenting my family’s life; our day to day antics and the here and now that we are in. When I’m photographing other families I am drawn to document connections, I think/hope that my images are about joy and taking pleasure in the simple things in life. I am always working on developing my compositions and love to look at images and see what it is that makes them work for me. Sometimes I look at an image and I can’t decide what it is that I like about it, it’s just a feeling, and quite often those are my favourites.
What is the most valuable tip you have learned in pursuit of shooting in a more documentary style?
Have your camera handy. Mine is always on the shelf within easy reach to grab when I see the moment I want to get. I’d also say really trying to compose the image using surroundings to help with leading lines and frames, I’m still working on it!
Why is storytelling photography important to you? Why do you feel compelled to shoot with this approach?
Having thought about this quite hard, I think that the reason that I am compelled to use this approach is the love of a good story. I love the real life aspect of it, the idea that I’m recording our story rather than taking a nice picture.
Briefly tell us about your journey into family documentary photography.
I picked up my camera after the birth of my second child, like so many others, I was taking photographs regularly of my children. To start with they were just portraits really, of each child at that point in time but I began to realised that I would remember so much more if I documented them doing what they were doing in their own innocent world of childhood which is such a short space of time. So as I learned more and more about photography this storytelling approach really began to resonate with me. If I could decide now what I would like to be when I grow up I would have said I wanted to be a documentary travel photographer. With my family lifestyle, that just is not possible so I am trying to take the documentary approach to my family photography.