The Sweetest Mother's Day Gift!

I’m a tech-savvy mommy of a 6-month old, and photos of her are very important to me. Not all of them get shared in a text, iCloud album, Facebook, or Instagram – but I take care in polishing the ones I do plan to share.

Here are some simple ways to improve the photos you take – even when your only camera is the one in your phone!

 

  1. Get Up Close

The number one thing you can do to very simply improve your photos is to get up close to your subject. This means their face (or whatever the focal point of the photo is) fills up most of what you see on your screen.

For a portrait, hold your phone slightly above the midpoint of their face – basically, position yourself so you’re not looking up their nose! If it’s your baby lying down, shoot from above their head, not down by their feet – unless of course their delicious toes are the subject of the photo!

4 Steps To Help You Take Better Cell Phone Pictures Of Your Kids www.herviewfromhome.com

Bonus tip: an off-center subject is much more interesting than one right in the middle!

 

  1. Check the Background

I had to teach my husband this early on – always, always look around your subject to see what else is in your frame before you take the photo! Sometimes, you want the background, like in a landscape photo, or on vacation when the location is the subject. But often, a trash can or errant shoe may cause regret in an otherwise perfect photo of a precious moment.

Step 1 – get up close – can help alleviate background troubles. So can a slight tilt to produce a creative angle. Or, take a step or two to the side – sometimes their head/toy/high chair will then block whatever is unsightly in the background.

  1. Don’t Block the Light

Light – as you know – lets you see things. The handheld aspect of phones sometimes means it’s easy to block the photos light source simply by holding out your arm. Then, when you look at your photo, you see a rectangle shadow dampening babies smile.

Practice holding your phone in a non-intrusive way – closer to your body, slightly to the side of the subject –  and you will find it only takes about .5 seconds to shift your position while still capturing the shot with the same impact. The best thing to do is not separate this step out, but take it into consideration with steps 1 and 2.

4 Steps To Help You Take Better Cell Phone Pictures Of Your Kids www.herviewfromhome.com

Sometimes you can’t adjust your kids position, like when it would disrupt the moment. But other times you can pull back a curtain, or scoot them slightly more in front of the window. It’s OK to do some light staging to highlight your child’s star power!

  1. Enhance & Flourish

Finally, there are a few apps I’d like to recommend to address the following: color, light, focus, flourishes, and mood. None of these involve airbrushing, just polishing and bringing out the best aspects of the photo to better showcase your lovely child.

Please note: the apps mentioned below are simply favorites I’ve discovered, and I am not being paid or otherwise compensated to advertise them.

 

Color

I’ve recently started running my photos through ColorStory as the first step in my editing process. I enjoy that you can save your steps to reuse later – handy if you commonly shoot in the same area of your home, or just like the overall effect you’ve created.

The first step let’s you crop to a square or other dimension, then moves you to choosing your color filters. You can adjust the intensity, and I frequently back it off to between 15-40% depending on the lighting available in the original. It’s amazing how adding a little saturation to your colors makes you realize how dull your phone initially captured them, even when it’s brightly colored kids toys.

 

4 Steps To Help You Take Better Cell Phone Pictures Of Your Kids www.herviewfromhome.com

ColorStory is free with paid additions, and after several months using it I haven’t felt the need to purchase anything to accomplish the effect I’m after.

 

Light

ColorStory also has some advanced editing tools, but I prefer Snapseed. By using the Selective feature, you can tap on the area which needs brightened, for example, and only affect that area of the photo. This is useful when the face is just a bit too shadowed, but you don’t want to alter the contrast of the whole photo. You can also slightly increase or decrease the saturation, such as if the Color Story edit was great for bringing out colors in your child’s outfit, but made their face too red.

Snapseed is one of the most powerful free photo apps available.

 

Focus

Snapseed also has a wonderful Lens Focus filter. You may have used Instagram’s Tilt Shift, and this is similar but with far more control. In addition, Snapseed has a Sharpen filter that is better than most. I also like the Details filter for darkening midtones and shadows which can make your subject pop.

 

Flourishes

I generally let my photos speak for themselves, but sometimes it’s fun to add lettering, or a badge, or a fun illustration to commemorate a milestone or holiday. For this, I absolutely love PicLab Studio. They have a fun library of illustrations, and many great fonts to choose from. You have full control over size, positioning, and color of any elements you add. Pinch and zoom to really fine tune your composition.

 

Mood

All of the previous apps and suggested edits will have already affected the mood of your photo. I frequently share my photos via Instagram, and usually do a last tap through my favorite filters, which sometimes leads to pleasantly delightful results for my final photo. Instagram filters are largely about mood, and they’ve crafted them with care.

4 Steps To Help You Take Better Cell Phone Pictures Of Your Kids www.herviewfromhome.com

Pro tip: Even if you don’t want to share your photo with the world, you can still use Instagram filters. Place your phone in airplane mode and then “Share” it, which will save the photo to your camera roll but preventing it posting. Then, click the X to completely cancel the posting before turning off airplane mode, else it will still post once it finds a network connection.

 

I’d love to see your comments on the success of using these steps and apps, or any questions. And please share with your friends and family – especially grandparents and significant others!

So God Made a Grandmother book by Leslie Means

If you liked this, you'll love our book, SO GOD MADE A GRANDMA

Order Now!

Stephanie Eckles

Stephanie is a science-minded gal who grew up on a farm in Nebraska, and now works full-time as a web developer. She is mom to two wonderful girls. Steph enjoys cooking and a few too many shows on Netflix. Photography and casual authorship are other hobbies, as is being an occasional tech conference speaker.

Robotics Kids Are Building More than You Can See

In: Kids
Robotics kid watching competition

These robotics kids are going to shape our future. I think this every time I watch an elementary, middle school, or high school competition. My thoughts go back many years to when my middle child, who was six at the time, went with my husband to the high school robotics shop. They were only stopping in briefly to pick up some engineering kits, but my child quickly became captivated by what the “big kids” were doing. He stood quietly watching until one student walked over and asked if he would like to see what they were working on. My son,...

Keep Reading

Foster Care Kids Are Worth Fighting for

In: Kids
Hand holding young child's hand

Sometimes foster care looks like bringing a child from a hard place into your home. Sometimes it looks like sitting at a ball field with a former foster love’s mom and being her village. He’s the one who has brought me to my knees more times than my own children. He’s the one I lie awake at night thinking about. He’s the one I beg the father to protect. He’s the one who makes me want to get in the trenches over and over again. It’s our Bubba. So much of the story is not mine to tell, but the...

Keep Reading

We Aren’t Holding Her Back—We’re Giving Her More Time

In: Kids
Child writing on preschool paper

When we decided to give our preschooler another year before kindergarten, I thought the hardest part would be explaining it to other people. I was wrong. The hardest part was the afternoon her teacher asked to talk. In that split second in the pick-up line, my heart sank. I assumed the worst. I braced myself for a conversation about behavior, about something we had somehow missed, about whether her strong personality was causing problems. Instead, it became the moment that confirmed what we already knew. We were not holding her back. We were giving her time. Our daughter is bright....

Keep Reading

A Life Lived Differently Is Not a Life Less Lived

In: Kids
Little boy running in field

My life changed on that beautiful autumn day. The thing is, nothing really happened. Not really. My life kind of went on as usual. A fly on the wall might even say it was a great day. I brought my 3-year-old son to an animal farm for a Halloween event. He was quirky as usual and a bit ornery that day. Aloof. “Come feed the baby animals,” I pleaded. No, thank you. Crowds of excited children? Absolutely not. Buckets of candy? You can keep them. My heart ached watching my beautiful, blonde-haired boy wander into a field alone, away from...

Keep Reading

Enjoy the Ride, Kid

In: Kids
Two people running up from the water at the beach

Last night I watched an episode of Shrinking. If you haven’t jumped into the series yet, it’s one of those that hits the heart hard- at least for me. The episode centered on the birth of a baby, while one of the characters grappled with the closing years of life. Spoiler alert: as the elder of the group cradled this new life in his arms, bridging generations across the hospital room, the moment of realization of how fast life goes hit like a ton of bricks. “Enjoy the ride, kid.” The final words of this episode are sitting with me,...

Keep Reading

Mommy, Will You Play With Me?

In: Kids, Motherhood
Boy sitting in middle of toys smiling

With four kids at three different schools, our days are full. Between sports practices, music lessons, clubs, rehearsals, games, meets, and playdates, it feels like we’re constantly heading somewhere. I love that my children are involved in activities, but occasionally, it’s nice to have some downtime. When I get a text or email that a practice has been canceled, it’s usually a huge relief. Last week, after-school sports were cancelled due to heavy rain. When I picked up my youngest son from school, I told him we’d be going straight home for the rest of the afternoon. He looked surprised....

Keep Reading

Could We Take a Page from the ’80s and Stop Overparenting?

In: Kids, Motherhood

I have a confession: Yesterday I let my 11-year-old play with fire. Like literally. We live in the country, there is still wet snow on the ground, and he’s done it with his dad at least 20 times. But yesterday was the fifth consecutive day of no school, and probably the twentieth consecutive day of him asking to have a small fire without dad. Part of me did it out of laziness. Part of me did it out of selfishness. And part of me did it out of nostalgia. Here’s the thing—when I was 11, I was already babysitting (like...

Keep Reading

A Big Brother Is His Little Sister’s First Friend

In: Kids
Big brother and little sister smiling at each other

He doesn’t remember the day she came home.But she has never known a world without him. From the beginning, he was there first. The first to reach for her hand. The first to explain the rules. The first to decide what was fair and what absolutely was not. He didn’t know he was being assigned a role. He just stepped into it. Big brother. She followed him everywhere. Into rooms she technically wasn’t invited into. Into games she didn’t fully understand. Into stories she insisted on hearing again and again. She wanted to do what he did, say what he...

Keep Reading

7 Is the Bridge Between Little and Big Kid

In: Kids
Girl sitting in front of dollhouse

I was in the middle of the post-holiday clean-up chaos when something hit me. My oldest daughter is seven, and while it feels like an age that doesn’t get talked about much, it really is turning out to be such a sweet spot. It hit me as we were redesigning her room. A change that occurred when she broke my mama-heart a few weeks prior by saying she didn’t think she wanted a princess room anymore. While everything in me wanted to try to convince her to keep it, stay small and sweet just a little longer, I knew I...

Keep Reading

So God Made a Gymnast

In: Kids
Young gymnast on balance beam

God made a gymnast with fearless grace, strength in her heart, and a fire in her spirit. He molded her courage, steady and true, and quietly whispered, “We believe in you.” He taught her balance when life feels chaotic and messy, to leap into her faith and stick each landing just right. When she stumbles, He is always right there to help her rise back up with faith in her soul and a spark in her eyes. Each floor routine with the grace of a swan; each move is a dream, all built on dedication and grit. God made her...

Keep Reading