Apr 8 2026 | By: Animal House Photography
Brooke’s newborn photos were everything I love about in-home newborn photos - calm, peaceful, and a true documentation of life as a brand new family of four. I could tell their baby boy was so loved from the moment I walked in the door. She and dad were glowing, and big brother (3) was excited to show off his new little brother. It was actually very cute because as the session went on big brother became very aware he wasn't the center of attention, and made sure I understood he wasn't entirely ok with that yet! (Which is completely normal for toddlers to experience as new big siblings, and honestly…part of the story of adding a new baby into the family!)
If you’re nervous about including an older sibling in newborn photos, you’re not alone. Toddlers don’t want a long photo session. They want to be seen, included, and then freed to go be toddlers.
That’s why I don’t plan sibling photos as one big, perfect moment. I build them into the flow in a way that works for real life:
We start with connection, not poses - Snuggles on the bed, sitting by mom, a quick “come see baby” moment. Simple and close.
We keep it short - I grab the sibling images in a few minutes while attention is still there, then we let big brother take a break.
Breaks are part of the plan - Snacks, toys, a show in the other room, dad stepping in — whatever helps them reset.
I follow their lead - If big brother wants to kiss baby, amazing. If he’s not into it, that’s okay too. We’ll come back to it later.
The goal is honest, not perfect - Sometimes the sweetest photo is a toddler hand on baby’s head… and sometimes it’s a toddler peeking in from the edge because he’s warming up.
In Brooke’s home, that’s exactly how it went — big brother was sometimes excited, curious, occasionally annoyed, and completely normal. And when he did come close, you could see Brooke light up watching her boys together. Those are the moments you’ll want to remember.
Dad only had a few minutes off work, so we started with what mattered most - family photos with everyone together, then quick mom + dad + baby shots while we had him. Once we had those images safely captured, the session immediately slowed down.
That’s one of the biggest benefits of an in-home newborn session. We can work with real life. If someone needs to jump on a meeting or a toddler needs a snack break, we can pivot without the stress of rushing through a studio timeline.
Despite the press for time, we still took it slow and let things unfold naturally. Dad's time with the baby went smoothly. I didn't want to tell Brooke this, but her new little one might just be a big ol' daddy's boy when he's bigger. He lit up in Dad's arms, and we got the cutest little smiles!
After dad got his moment to have the baby all to himself, we focused on Brooke. She was joyful, patient, doting, and totally in love. Those are the moments I want every mom to have captured — the tiny details, the quiet pauses, the way you naturally hold your baby close without even thinking.
We made sure to get photos of just Brooke and the baby as well as big brother, Brooke, and the baby. It felt important to make sure big brother was included, so he knew he was still precious to his mama.
If you’re dreaming of newborn photos that feel relaxed and true to your family (even with a toddler big sibling who might have big opinions about their new role!), I’d love to help you document this season.
As a mama of 3 myself, I know these are more than just pictures to you. These are the moments you want to freeze so you can remember them always. You can learn more about my approach to lifestyle family photography here or send me a message and we’ll get you on the calendar for your own stress-free newborn photos!
ps. if you're expecting or have a mama friend that is, my friend and fellow photographer Julana wrote this guest blog post on 6 ways to help older kiddos adjust to a new sibling. It's honestly great info I wish I had when our family was transitioning. .
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