The Journal

A glimpse inside the everyday magic of families’ lives.

Keeley McKay Keeley McKay

The Branch Family at Home

Historically, I’ve taken winters off from photography: it’s cold, the weather is wildly unpredictable, and the roads can be treacherous. As I’ve thought hard about what photography means to me though, and what I want to provide, I’ve found so much meaning in photographing families in their homes. The heart of it all: where families spend most their time together and where so many milestones, big and small, take place. So that’s what I’ve been doing this winter (and occasionally sneaking outside for some snow angels or sledding, weather permitting).

In-home sessions are particularly great for newborn sessions. I love how comfortable this whole session felt. Everyone was in their comfort zone and this sweet family’s decor reflected their fun personalities so well. I really loved the Dr. Seuss print boldly featured in their dining room: it reminded me of a print that hung in my family’s dining room when I was a kid. I never really loved that print, but I think about it so often - maybe because the dining room table was always the center of activities at home when I was a kid. It was where we ate, did arts and crafts, where I wrote *incredible* short stories on a massive old PC. I never thought much of that print, but it frequently appears in my memories of my childhood.

And as I think about it, I realize that those kinds of things are important to me to document. Whether it’s your forever home or just a stepping stone, your kids will search their memories for pieces of their childhood, and sometimes the most seemingly insignificant details are the ones that complete the puzzle. So please remember: your home doesn’t need to be perfect. Your wardrobes don’t need to be brand new. Eventually, your kids will simply want to see what life looked like and I’d love to help you provide tangible reminders of it all.

Film scans by

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Keeley McKay Keeley McKay

Bradley Family: Late Fall Family Session in Big Sky

A family of five, comprised of Mom, Dad, and three daughters age 2 to 7, sit on a hill. Mom has her arms around Dad's neck and the daughters are all looking directly at the camera.

The Bradleys were one of my first family clients at a time I was only photographing weddings and couples. I was so sure I didn’t want to be a “family” photographer, but Katie’s initial email was so endearing I decided to say yes. I’ve gotten to see them every year since that first time in 2017 or 2018, and over the years as a wedding photographer, I realized that the thing I really loved about photographing weddings was that it was like photographing one big family.

I left the wedding world at the end of last year and have learned so much about why I’m drawn to family photography and what it means to me in the years since Katie first reached out. It means so much to me that they have let me in each year for so long and through my own evolution as a family photographer. If I’m honest, photographing their sweet family of five feels a little like cheating: she’s a pro at styling them and the girls have more personality than I can bottle up in these sessions. But it’s also made me realize the importance of creating a relationship - some level of comfort, trust, and familiarity with the people in front of my lens. If I can give you one piece of advice for stellar honest, genuine, and authentic family photos, it would be to let your guard down. Let your photographer see the real you - not the “photo” you.

Film scans by The FIND Lab

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Keeley McKay Keeley McKay

Allie, Lucy + Andy: Motherhood Session with Horses

Mom wears a long, white dress while leading two horses. One daughter is riding the Appaloosa bareback and the younger daughter walks alongside Mom. There are mountains and storm clouds in the distance.

2023 was a year of thinking hard about what I want to create and what I want to give each family who steps in front of my lens. I couldn’t narrow it down to a specific theme, aesthetic, location, or anything else, but the one thing that stayed in the back of my mind was the idea of artfully documenting REAL family moments. For years, the term “lifestyle” has been used to describe more candid photography, but what if it actually meant “photography that captures your real lives”? And that’s what I realized I wanted to do.

I want to focus on the minutiae of your daily lives. What do you and your kids love to do right now? Is one kiddo fascinated by dinosaurs? What if you just brought me along on a trip to the Museum of the Rockies, or even simpler - what if we just play with the dinos in your backyard sandbox? With this fresh blanket of snow we got today, we could bundle the kids up, head out to the backyard and make some snow angels, or head to the sledding hill for a bit, then head home for some hot cocoa. Let’s simplify the idea of family photos and focus on preserving the things you truly want to remember about your lives at this stage. Bonus: by keeping it simple and building a session around things your kids already know and love, they’re much more likely to be happy and open up so we can capture their true personalities!

For Allie and her family, horses are a huge part of their lives. They work cattle with them, they take in rescues and give them a loving home, and the girls get to grow up knowing what it means to care for and be responsible for these incredible animals. For this motherhood session, it only made sense to include their sweet mares.

So what do you want to remember about this time? Let’s create a session around those things! Extra bonus: film is inherently well-suited to this type of session. It’s nostalgic and perfectly imperfect, leaving you with images that truly bottle up the feeling and essence of this season.

Film scans by The FIND Lab

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Keeley McKay Keeley McKay

The Zarda Family

When I think back on my favorite photos from my own childhood, they aren’t the perfect family portraits. They’re the ones where I can see how interested my parents were in what my sister and I were doing. They show me our little personalities taking shape and also how amused my parents were by those little (sometimes big) personalities.

There are a million ways to “do” family photos, but at the end of the day, I want you to see yourselves. I want your kids to see the way you beam at them when they do something funny, and I want them to see the pride in your eyes when they work up the courage to do something scary. Because, while I hope you love these photos now, truly, they are for your kids. There are so many things your kids will not remember because they were too young at the time, but photos give them the chance to fill in all those gaps as they get older.

My two cents: make time for family photos frequently. Don’t overthink the wardrobe or the location because its your connections that are most important. Pick some light colored, neutral pieces you’re comfortable in, find a park (or keep it simple and stay home!), and spend a little time loving on each other. Rachel and her sweet little family did it perfectly.

From a fun mentor session with Kaley from Kansas.

Film developed + scanned by The FIND Lab.

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