If you’re the one who wants the photos and your partner is somewhere between mildly unenthusiastic and actively resistant, you are absolutely not alone. This is one of the most common things I hear before a session, and honestly, you can usually tell when someone has been gently persuaded into coming along.
The good news is that it almost always turns out fine. More than fine, actually.
Why partners push back (and why it makes sense)
Being photographed feels uncomfortable for a lot of people. It is not vanity or being difficult. It is genuinely awkward to stand somewhere and be looked at, not know what to do with your face, and wonder whether you will recognise yourself in the results.
Most reluctant partners are not opposed to having the photos. They are opposed to the bit they imagine beforehand. The standing around, the posing, the feeling of performing for a camera. That is a completely reasonable thing to dread.
The part they have not factored in is that a good session does not feel like that.
What actually happens when you arrive
Sessions are not formal or high-pressure. There is no rigid posing, no instruction to hold a smile for thirty seconds while someone adjusts a tripod. It is much more relaxed than that.
For family sessions, a lot of it is just spending time together while I work around you. For newborn sessions, the focus is mostly on your baby, and parents are guided gently rather than directed. Nobody is expected to perform on arrival, and there is time to settle in before anything feels like it is really happening.
Most reluctant partners go quiet within about ten minutes. Not bored quiet. Just comfortable quiet, when they have realised it is not what they expected.
If your partner hates how they look in photos
This one comes up a lot too, sometimes separately from the reluctance issue and sometimes tangled up with it. The worry is not really about the session, it is about seeing the results and feeling disappointed, or worse, embarrassed.
It is worth knowing that the kind of photography I do is specifically about capturing real moments rather than creating polished images where everyone looks like they are trying very hard. Gentle posing, flattering angles and careful editing are all part of the process, but the goal is photographs that feel like you, on a good day, rather than a version of you that does not quite land.
If your partner has real concerns about how they come across in photos, that is worth mentioning beforehand. It is not a problem, and it helps to know.
If they really cannot face it
Occasionally someone arrives and it is clear quite quickly that they are not comfortable and are not going to get comfortable. That is fine. Parent images are always optional. Beautiful photographs of your baby or your children can absolutely be created without every adult in the room being in them.
Some families come back for a separate session later when the reluctant person has had time to see the first round of images and feel differently. That happens more often than you might think.
The point is that one person’s hesitation does not have to mean the whole thing falls apart.
If you are the one reading this who has been handed the phone
Hello. You have probably been sent this link by someone who really wants these photographs.
Here is what is actually useful to know. The session will be shorter than you think, less awkward than you are imagining, and at the end of it there will be photographs of your family that someone you love will look at for the rest of their life.
You do not have to be enthusiastic. You just have to show up.







