Dec 31, 2025 | By: mQn Photography
Behind every photo I take is a heart full of dreams… and a calendar full of school events, dog walks, and the occasional “Wait, where did I put that box cutter?” moment.
This season has made a lot feel crystal clear. My husband and I just sold our home in North Oaks and we’re buying a smaller home in the Summit-University neighborhood of St. Paul. It’s an intentional move toward “less house, more life,” and it’s made me think a lot about what I’m really building — for my family, for my clients, and for myself.
If you know, you know.
My biggest goal in life isn’t to raise perfect kids. It’s to raise the kind of people who hold doors, notice when someone’s left out, and don’t forget how to be decent when life gets stressful. Teenagers are basically walking contradictions (sweet one minute, slightly feral the next), so I’m learning to play the long game: consistency, humor, and a lot of deep breaths.
And honestly? Parenting teens has made me more patient as a Twin Cities family photographer. I understand big feelings. I understand moods. I understand that sometimes people need a minute before they can show up as themselves whether they’re 16 or 36.
Selling our home in North Oaks felt like closing a chapter. A good chapter. A busy one. The kind where life happens fast and you don’t always realize how much stuff you’ve collected until you try to pack it.
Moving to Summit-University is our way of choosing what we want daily life to feel like: simpler, closer-in, more walkable, more intentional. And in the middle of all the purging and sorting, one thing has been non-negotiable for me: photos stay.
Not on a hard drive. Not buried in a phone camera roll under 9,000 screenshots. On the walls. In frames. In albums you can actually flip through.
Because a home can be smaller and still feel rich not in a fancy way, but in a “this place holds our story” way. That’s the kind of home I’m building.
I’m a mom, a business owner, and a person who occasionally needs five minutes of silence to remember how to be normal. (Highly recommend.)
This goal is about protecting the little rhythms: the quiet morning moments, the dog walks, the dinner conversations, the fact that I want my life to feel like mine not just a blur of obligations and errands. Downsizing is part of that. So are boundaries. So is learning that rest is allowed, even when my brain tells me I should be doing twelve other things.
It’s also why I’m such a fan of family photos in the studio sometimes. No weather drama. No bug spray. No “Is it going to rain?” group text spiral. Just a calm space where you can show up, breathe, and be together.
I’ve been doing this for over 15 years, and the thing I’ve learned is simple: moms are carrying a lot.
So one of my biggest professional goals is to make your family photo session feel doable even if your life is currently held together with dry shampoo and calendar reminders.
That’s why I offer wardrobe styling and a client closet/studio wardrobe. Not because I’m trying to be fancy because decision fatigue is real. If I can take “What are we going to wear?” off your plate, that matters.
Whether you’re coming for studio family photos in Northeast Minneapolis or we’re meeting somewhere outdoors, I want you to feel supported from the beginning. The planning. The outfit options. The pacing. The gentle guidance. The permission to not be “perfect.”
Because you don’t need to earn photos by having it all together. You’re allowed to show up as you are.
And if you’re looking for a Minneapolis family photographer who will keep it calm, organized, and not weirdly intense, hi. That’s me.
This one matters deeply to me.
I offer complimentary NICU photo sessions for families in the hospital when I’m able and when it fits because sometimes the beginning of a baby’s story doesn’t look the way anyone imagined. It can be bright lights, wires, monitors, and a kind of bravery you don’t ask for but somehow find anyway.
These sessions aren’t about making something look like it isn’t hard. They’re about honoring what is.
I want those families to have photos that say: We were here. We loved this baby fiercely. We showed up. I want them to look back and remember the tenderness in the middle of the fear. The tiny hand wrapped around a finger. The way a parent’s face changes when they finally get to hold their baby close.
As a newborn photographer in Minneapolis, I photograph a lot of joy and I’m grateful for that. But I also believe some of the most important photos aren’t taken in perfect light. They’re taken in real life, in sacred, complicated moments that deserve to be seen.
That belief shapes everything I do from NICU sessions to maternity and newborn photos, to every milestone and family photo session where the biggest thing you’re celebrating is simply being together.
If you’re walking through a NICU season (or know someone who is), the Minnesota Neonatal Foundation is a wonderful local resource that supports NICU families and the care teams who walk with them.
If you made it this far, thanks for being here. Writing this felt a little like leaving a sticky note on the fridge that says, “Here’s what matters right now.” In a good way.
And if booking a family photo session is one of yours this year whether you want something simple in the studio or something outdoors you can always reach out. I’ll make it easy.
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