I admire birth photographers. I don’t engage in birth photography myself, but I marvel at those who do it well. The emotional climate is always changing at a birth, and so a photographer must not only be prepared in their own heart and mind, but also bring to the birth a level of patience, compassion, and skill that allows them to adapt to any and all changing conditions. The photographer is there to document what is in front of them and has very little to no control over the situation. They can’t dictate to the doctors or midwives what they need:
“Hey, could you angle that light a little bit for me? I know you are trying to deliver a baby and all, but that would really help ME.”
“Woah…woah…woah…slow it down there. This is going way too fast. Could you wait a minute to deliver? I am not quite ready.”
“Hey, there, Doctor. I’m going to need you to perform the caesarean super slow. That would be great.”
“DUDE! YOU’RE IN MY LIGHT!”
No. You don’t get to do that.
And it’s a one time-deal; kind of like a wedding. There is no way to re-insert baby back into the womb for a re-shoot if you muck things up. You get ONE opportunity. One. The parents are counting on you.
So knowing all this…and here comes the Tough Love part…don’t take it on if you don’t know what you’re doing. And this applies to any job.
I read a post in my newsfeed recently about a birth photographer who was in distress. She was at the hospital freaking out and asking for tips because the room the mom was in didn’t have a big window and she is a 100% outdoor natural light photographer.
Just in case it wasn’t clear, she was AT THE BIRTH in the room, asking for help shooting it because the room was dark.
About the Author
Lynn Cartia (AKA Missy Mwac) is a photographer/eater of bacon/drinker of vodka and a guide through the murky waters of professional photography. You can follow her social media links here: Facebook, Tumblr. This article is also published here and shared with permission.