If you would like to set up a photography session, or have any questions, contact me via email: betsy@betsyjophotography.com. Thank you!

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Commence: (v) to begin; start, inaugurate.

This wedding day was filled with beautiful sunshine and happy smiles. Cecelia and Steve were so happy to be getting married, and I was so privileged to be there to document the story of their day.

Thanks to you both for being so easy to work with-- Welcome home from your wonderful Hawaiian honeymoon!


~~~

My favorite getting ready shot-- so intent on getting everything just right. I love the feminine sweep of this one.
















Cecelia and Steve chose to do a 'first look' session, so that they could meet each other before the wedding service, and have a few minutes together alone. (Well, with my camera clicking.) The first look is a great opportunity to get portraits done, so that the couple can enjoy the reception without having to leave for portraits. Plus, it helps with the nervous jitters. (Or so I've been told by a certain bride. :)


Watching for his bride:











































































My clients (and I) love comments-- be sure to let us know your favorites!




"All seasons are beautiful for the person who carries happiness within."

-Horace Friess



*To learn about or purchase 'Prints for a Purpose', click here. Thank you for the interest and support thus far!*

Sneak Peek: Companion

'Just a quick little glimpse into a beautiful day:







*This site is going to be a very busy place over the next number of days-- lots of sessions to blog!*



*To learn about or purchase 'Prints for a Purpose', click here. Thank you for the interest and support thus far!*

Monday, October 12, 2009

Prints for a Purpose - Part II



A number of weeks ago, I announced a new venture in merging my photography with a desire to do something meaningful. Prints for a Purpose is the result of that brainstorming. You can read the full original post here.

The response from the first charity was encouraging and humbling, to know that people care enough to do something that seems small, but helps in a big way. 100% of the profit from the sales of the prints goes toward the announced charity. I was so glad to send out all of your donations to the Crohn's and Colitis Foundation of America this weekend, knowing that my readers are the ones who helped in managing and finding a cure for a difficult, chronic illness that has afflicted not just Paul, but so many-- old and young. (He's young, by the way :). So thank you. Thank you for caring. For remembering. And most of all, for giving.

With that in mind, it's time to focus on another charity that works diligently toward finding a cure. When choosing an organization, I want it to be something that has somehow affected people I love, or friends of ours, or clients I've crossed paths with. That's why for this month, I've chosen 'Autism Speaks' as the charity, in honor of my little friend and client, Sam.


I've known Sam's mom for years, and I think of her often when I post, knowing that she checks the blog frequently-- which, of course, makes me happy! And, she was one of my first 'real' clients to trust me completely with capturing her children through photography.

To donate to 'Autism Speaks' , you can purchase a print from this gallery, with 100% of the profits going to fund finding a cure for little children like Sam. Be sure to tell your friends and family. For more information on autism, its history, warning signs, and what you can do to help, click here.

Thank you for remembering Sam and so many like him. Thank you for helping.


"I feel life is a journey and we all have to learn to ride the storm, for some of us it can seem more like a tidal wave, but with every storm the sun eventually comes out."

-Alyson Bradley

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Talkin' 'bout my girl.

Nory. At play. (Or is it work?)

How happy this picture makes me. The sway of her sun-streaked bobbed hair. The complete concentration of her features while she 'irons' her little dress, having no idea I'm there with the camera right outside her door. Her little doll obediently 'watching' her from the highchair. Her softly padded feet in brand new socks. The vintage little iron in her left hand. I love that little left hand.

How I love this little microcosmic glimpse into her day.

How I love my little Nora-girl.




"Happiness comes of the capacity to feel deeply, to enjoy simply, to think freely, to risk life, to be needed. Which give happiness."

-Thomas Jefferson, 3rd American President

(1743-1826)

Monday, October 5, 2009

Dignify: (v) o confer honor or dignity upon; honor; ennoble.


This shoot is one of those that I feel so privileged to capture.


Whenever Ellen sends me an email, I know it will be a great opportunity to capture something meaningful that she has coordinated. Ellen holds the record for the most photo sessions in the shortest amount of time, and I always love working with her and her family.

This session was for Ellen and her little boy Raymond, her cousin Kelly, and their great aunt Lee. Ellen is always so good at organizing her plans; Kelly came from New York City, Ellen picked up Lee at her assisted living apartment, and made sure little Ray was all set to go. Of course, it was helpful to have Jim along to help out, too! :)

I always enjoy photographing people of advanced age, and Lee holds the record for that at 98 years old. I have to admit to getting a little emotional on my way home after this shoot. Lee reminded me so much of my Grandma McBrierty-- her white, white hair, the soft gleam in her eyes, the dignity in her bearing-- and her mind clear, with a sharp wit to match. Couple that with a beautiful little boy in her lap, and it's hard not to be sentimental.

We met at Orchard Hill in South Windsor, and I had fun sipping hot cider and grabbing some fall images before all of the subjects arrived. Not a bad job, is it? :)

Thank you Kelly, Ellen, Jim and Lee. I once again enjoyed our time together, and it was great to meet some new faces. Thanks for trusting me with these memories. Enjoy your preview!
























Isn't she beautiful? --




"Remember this,- that there is a proper dignity and proportion to be observed in the performance of every act of life."

-Marcus Aurelius

Sneak Peek - Sweetness in an Orchard.

This little guy has visited me 3 times to have his pictures taken-- and he gets cuter every time, if that's even possible. Look at those eyes!

He was more interested in the apples laying around him than in my camera, so I had a little fun with the composition on this one:

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Savor: (v) to give oneself to the enjoyment of.

'Saturday rain' has never been my favorite word couplet. But today it is. The skies were so thick and steely gray that it was easy to sleep a little longer, and relish the freedom of a day without scheduling.

It was a privilege to get up and watch as Paul made breakfast, all of us deciding to make it a book day-- which means a run to Barnes and Noble, roaming aisles filled with the glorious smell of new paper. It was a privilege to have a hot beverage to soothe a sore throat, and relish its flavor as we read through long lines of type. To leaf through thickly-bound books, and then slowly run fingertips along a row of hardcover spines. To turn the corner, and see our children doing the same thing, just at a shorter height.

I love that our children love books. Well, I love it most of the time, anyway. Some days I get frustrated when I have to call them three times to come empty the dishwasher, and I don't like when Joel delays homework so that he can finish one more chapter of his Hardy Boy book. But I love to see Connor's fervored concentration, the ruffle of his brow as he gets deeply involved in a plot, even if it is of the elementary 'Berenstein Bears' variety. I love that when they get money for their birthday, their request is to head to Northshire Bookstore in Manchester, VT to get their latest favorite. Some days I am rather irritated when I'm tripping over the books that Nora left laying on the floor, or I find myself picking them up off of the chairs in the sunroom. And it doesn't thrill me when I find books out on the driveway next to a camp chair, or sliding around under the seats in the car. However, I do like the fact that we have to move the little bookcase out of the living room, just to make room for a bigger one, because the other case is overflowing onto the hardwood floor. I do love that they can sit for hours and learn new words, or take a little journey through time to a different era just by turning a page.

I relish our trips to the bookstore, all of us together, yet so separate in our search for something that calls to us. Sometimes it's Grisham or Montgomery, Whitman or Frost, even F.W. Dixon or Peggy Parish. It can be fiction or history, biography or classic literature, but it all pulls us in, and makes a day of grey rain not only bearable, but pleasurable. Couple that with the fact that Starbucks has released their pumpkin spice latte, and we had the makings for a lovely, long day. And as I roamed the aisles sipping at the smoothness of the drink, I couldn't decide what I savored more-- the delicious smell and taste of the tall-whipped-cream-nutmeg-cinnamon-spicy-pumpkiny goodness in hand, or the fact that our children love books as much as we.

I think it's the latter.





Rain, rain, don't go away. Not yet. Because I'm savoring today.




"I would be most content if my children grew up to be the kind of people who think decorating consists mostly of building enough bookshelves."


~Anna Quindlen