Tag Archives: whitefish bay photographer

Been so long I don’t know where to start, but I gotta’ start somewhere!

Sorry to my faithful blog readers. It would seem that I haven’t been busy enough to have something to blog about, but alas, quite the opposite! The busier I get, the harder I find it to make time to get over here and share. So, lets hope I can squeeze it in at least more than once a month!

I have many great images to share & I promise I will. For now, I will share with you one of my biggest personal accomplishments of the last few years. On New Year’s Day I ran a 10K in Minneapolis, Minnesota in 1:02 and I am now registered to run the San Francisco Half Marathon in July!

In high school, like many, I was an athlete. I played ice hockey, softball & was on the swim team. I loved to be physical; riding bike, running, just getting out there. But like many of us, over time, life got in the way of all that. Without a coach standing over me telling me I’d better go faster or I’d go again, my couch potato days began.

About three months ago I was a the funeral of a sweet older woman from our church in California. I was a bit late, so I slid in the back row. As I sat there, looking at the rows and rows of grey heads, I realized something; there were almost no overweight old people! After that day I began to pay close attention to this phenomenon everywhere I went; the sobering truth seemed to hold true. Now, I am not saying I was “fat” or that I was some morbidly obese person destined for the grave. But I was most definitely not at my best. Instead of feeling thirty-something and strong and healthy I felt tired and old and just a little bit lazy. Not only was I choosing to sit out the more active parts of life, I was choosing to sit in on some very bad eating habits.

Armed with the knowledge that I was almost 30 pounds over my ideal weight, that I have a family history of heart disease and cardiac arrest, that my cholesterol was in the high 300’s when not on my medication and that my little brother and my older sister had successfully trained for and run the Twin Cities Marathon, I knew it was time to get off that couch (I use the term couch to describe a lifestyle cuz in reality I don’t really have much time for sitting on the couch!) and get running. I call it the “no excuse” exercise. All you need is a pair of shoes and you’re all set. No membership fees, no driving to the gym, no schedules.  

Our ten year old son, Isaiah, had recently taken up cross-country, so I thought he would make a great running partner. Ha! First day out my goal was to run one mile. Isaiah had me RUNNING! I made it about 1/4 of a mile before my body about gave out. Isaiah looked back at me, hobbling down the road and said, “WHY are you WALKING?”  I gave him a little education in our body’s response to aging, inactivity and bad eating. From there, he started coaching me to run just a little further each day. “Come on Mom, your gonna’ run all the way to that stop sign WITHOUT STOPPING! You can do it!” I was motivated by the 5K race my sister had challenged me to on New Years Day and I knew I’d better step it up fast, or I was gonna’ just about die running 3.1 miles in the dead of winter.

Soon, my  husband Brian was joining us on our runs and our distances began to stretch a little. I can so vividly remember the day I ran two miles without stopping and I actually felt GOOD! It didn’t take long for me to move the goal line from a 5K to a 10K, or 6.2 miles, and I began to push even further and faster. Not only was I running distances I could not have imagined, just a couple months earlier, but I was feeling like a young 30 year old, strong and in control. I was losing weight, too. By the time the race day came around I had lost over 20 pounds (this most certainly makes running easier; it took a 20 pound weight off my back!)

On race day in Minnesota it was COLD! The mercury read just 7 degrees that morning, with a nice breeze to bring the “feels like” number down below zero. Thankfully, we were prepared. We’d run all 100 of our logged training miles in cold temperatures, some over ice and snow. Making the day all the more exciting, my brother, sister and cousin all joined us and we had quite the team out there! Out of the five of us, I am proud to say, my 10 year old son took the prize. He finished in 51:19! Brian came in right behind him and I could barely believe it when I learned that my time was 1 hour and 2 minutes; 30 seconds per mile faster than I’d ever run and exponentially faster than the day I began.

As high as I felt after running that race, the real reward had come the week before. Brian and I were staying in a lovely little cabin on a lake (frozen of course) in Northern Minnesota. We went out on treks through the 2 feet of fresh snow, we shoveled off the lake to make a ice skating rink & we logged hours of sledding, pulling our little niece Natalie and our own Lydia up in the sled almost every time and . . . none of it was hard. It was amazing to feel so in shape, so strong, so YOUNG again! I am on cloud nine, can you tell??

So the next time you see me you might be surprised. Maybe you won’t recognize me. Or maybe you’ll come see me run in the SF half marathon in July and maybe see me finish strong. :-) But the most important “maybe” for me is that maybe, if God allows, I will be an old lady, a grandmother and great-grandmother, maybe even one of those old ladies who is still running races at 65 . . . But one thing I know I can say for sure, there’s no way I am going back to where I was, the day I couldn’t finish half a mile without heaving on my hands and knees. No, thank you; its nothing but open roads and a healthy life for me from here on out!

A kind of crappy photo taken with Brian’s iPhone just after the race, and just before we all turned into popsicles.

             race

Day Nineteen. LOVE this kid!

My life & your images: Tonight, the eve of Thanksgiving, I am burning the midnight oil to get all caught up on the pile of Christmas sessions and orders. Its like this every year. Thanksgiving for my family is often no more than a one-day break from round the clock work. Usually, we don’t even do a big dinner, but instead go out or order pizza and spend the day together, just being a family. Tomorrow will be no exception. I love it!! So tonight, while slogging through session after session, editing until I can barely see, I came across this delicious little gem. Mister Mojo here (could he BE any cuter?) is the big brother in this family. While we were shooting them all coloring pictures in the family living room, Mojo came up with this wonderful little interpretation of everyone in the room. good lookin'

Love it! Look closely, especially at the titles. It’s priceless . . . Mom is laughing, Matt (step-dad) is saying “Whoa, man, you are hot!” (I assume Matt was talking to his wife. :-) , Macy, the baby of the family, is screaming, he he, I wish I could see what miss Karsen is saying, I’ll have to ask mom, and Mojo, he’s sighing. I guess he doesn’t love this photo stuff, or maybe its Macy’s screaming that’s got him down. I just love this, don’t you? I have the world’s best job, late nights and all. Do you see me in there?? I gotta’ say I am glad I don’t know what he thinks I am saying!

macy how he sees it

Day Sixteen. Ten, nine . . . seven?

Your images: Last August I found myself at the HOTTEST photo session of my career. Not THAT kind of hot . . . more like 105 degrees farenhiet hot. The kids took it all in stride, as they are native to San Antonio, and high temperatures are more normal than not. But I found myself melting away and dripping with sweat to boot. Somehow, though, we managed to have a fantastic session which we finished off with these fun images of the kids by their age numeral in a parkinglot. How fun are these? Don’t you think their mom needs to use these for her Christmas card?? :-)

Pro Photography tip: When I saw these cool numbers on the parklot surface I KNEW I had to use them somehow. However, they were in full sun, which is less-than-desirable, not to mention, the kids would be squinting like crazy. My solution? I had Dad pull the suburban up to each space, blocking the sun over just enough of the space to make it work. The kids had their feet under the car (talk about HOT) and I had my tush up against the vehicle and my feet over their legs. I worked!! A kind of make-shift reflector. When you are on-location, you can always find a way, as long as you think outside the box. tennineseven

Way Up-North. Four boys, love it!

This family was so much fun to capture on the lake, in beautiful northern Minnesota. I photographed this family four years ago, when they only had two boys. How cool to come and capture them all again, with two more little brothers!! Mom is expecting number five soon, can you imagine? I can’t wait to come back again and capture this family as they continue to grow up and to grow in number.

I especially love that first image, the colors, the softness and the DOG! She ordered it BIG and I was so glad. I almost didn’t want to wrap it up to send and kept telling Brian, “I wish this photo was MY family so I could hang it up in my house.” :-)

Oh, so pretty! Minnesota family photographer.

This little family of honeys gave me a run for my money! But oh, are they cute. My tour this past July was really a great challenge to my shooting habits. California has a certain kind of light and its own unique backdrop. Being in new places forced me to think outside the box and find new ways to “capture the light”. I was worried about rain, which thankfully didn’t come, but the dark, overcast skies proved to be a beautiful compliment to our golden field, don’t you think?

I should have taken a photo of Lydia, who, because of some unexpected circumstances had to come with me and thus, spent this photo shoot watching “Cars” in the van with the windows down. She was right next to us as we shot these photos . . . but what I didn’t see were the 10,000 mosquitoes that joined her and ATE her alive! Poor thing was strapped in her car seat, with no means to get away from them. She was covered in bites . . . and I in guilt. Well, I am taking in my “Summer in the Mid-west lessons” and I won’t make that mistake again!

Whitefish Bay family photographer. Lake Michigan.

Milwaukee’s proximity to Lake Michigan was one of the reasons my husband, Brian, and I chose to relocate our family here from San Jose, CA. I have many fond memories from my childhood of hours and hours by Lake Superior’s shores in northern Wisconsin. Countless more hours were spent sailing around Bayfield, Wisconsin’s Apostle Islands in my dad’s boat. In our early years of engagement and marriage, Brian and I spent as much time as we could each summer up in Bayfield, enjoying the unique beauty and freshness of the biggest of the Great Lakes’ wonders, so Lake Michigan’s beaches and shoreline feel like home to us. Our new house is just three quick miles from this beautiful Lake Michigan beach. We feel so blessed to be able to visit this natural marvel with our children; skipping rocks, building castles or taking a cool dip on a hot summer day. Even more of a blessing; our children love it as much as we do.