If I had a dollar for every parent who began a phone consultation with, “I just don’t think my child will sit still…” I could probably fund a small vacation.
The reality is, no two-year-old sits perfectly still. Not yours. Not anyone’s.
Parents often worry their child is uniquely wiggly, uniquely shy, uniquely stubborn — uniquely unphotographable. But after years of creating heirloom portraits for toddlers and young children, I can promise you this: I have seen it all. The runners. The hiders. The deep thinkers who refuse to smile. The spirited little ones who would rather explore than pose.
None of that disqualifies a child from having a beautiful portrait.
An heirloom portrait is not created because a child can follow instructions flawlessly. It’s created because they are at an age worth preserving. Two-year-olds are busy. They are curious. They are discovering independence in real time. That energy is not something to eliminate — it’s something to gently guide.
Photographing toddlers requires patience, calm direction, and an understanding of childhood behavior. I don’t expect a two-year-old to behave like a five-year-old. Sessions are paced appropriately, expectations are realistic, and we work within short windows of attention and natural pauses.
Parents are often surprised at how smoothly everything unfolds — not because their child suddenly became still, but because the environment supports them exactly as they are.
One of the hardest things about childhood is how quickly each stage disappears. I have spoken with many parents who waited, thinking, “Maybe next year when they’re calmer.” But next year looks different. Faces change. Baby softness fades.
You won't regret creating portraits right now in this season. But many will regret waiting.
Your child does not need to be unusually compliant or exceptionally calm to deserve an heirloom portrait. They simply need to be in this season of life.
If you are considering an heirloom portrait but worry your toddler is “too much,” know this: there is nothing about your child that makes them unphotographable. There is only this sweet age worth remembering.
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