The Family Photographer

A podcast by Jenny Stein

Categories:

59 Episodes

  1. 39: Renato dPaula on Documenting Families, Births and His Own Life

    Published: 3/13/2018
  2. 38: Chuck Anerino on Patience

    Published: 2/27/2018
  3. 37: Brekke Johnson: Photos that Help Us See

    Published: 2/13/2018
  4. 36: Aaron Thomson on Making Family Photos in Good Times and Bad

    Published: 1/30/2018
  5. 35: Alex Lindsay on the Value of Old Family Movies

    Published: 1/9/2018
  6. 34: Brandon Price on Photographing His Son's First Year

    Published: 12/26/2017
  7. 33: Sandra Coan on Creating Your Dream Photography Business

    Published: 12/12/2017
  8. 32: Andrea Moffatt on Telling our Family Stories

    Published: 11/28/2017
  9. 31: Elena Blair on Beautifully Posed Family Photos

    Published: 11/14/2017
  10. 30: Rebecca Wyatt - Capturing Magic on Halloween

    Published: 10/31/2017
  11. 29: Xanthe Berkeley on Making Family Films

    Published: 10/17/2017
  12. 28: Yan Palmer talks about Love

    Published: 10/3/2017
  13. 27: Erica Montgomery on Finding Great Light for Family Photos

    Published: 9/19/2017
  14. 26: Nick Kelsh - How to Photograph Your Life

    Published: 9/5/2017
  15. 25: Erin Blinn: What A Photo A Day Helped Me See

    Published: 8/22/2017
  16. 24: Molly Flanagan: Visual Storytelling

    Published: 8/8/2017
  17. 23: Kevin Mullins on Candid Family Photography and Tackling Common Family Photo Challenges

    Published: 7/25/2017
  18. 22: Tim Coulson - Photographing the Essence of Life with His Family

    Published: 7/11/2017
  19. 21: Cheryl Hanna-Truscott - Photos from a Prison Nursery and Maternity Ward in Haiti

    Published: 6/27/2017
  20. 20: David duChemin - The Soul of the Camera

    Published: 6/13/2017

2 / 3

Your friends and family expect you to bring your camera to birthday parties and holiday dinners. You pick up your camera before the broom when your kids spill flour all over the kitchen floor. You're the family photographer. Every other week, I share my conversations with photographers about their work and their families. How can we take better photos of our family life? Why are we taking all these photos in the first place?