My First Newborn Photography Shoot – Longmont, CO

By Kat Knuth, Longmont Newborn Photographer

As a new Longmont newborn photographer, I needed models from Longmont to practice my newborn photography on. It’s rare, but I put out a model call on social media to get a couple families to model for me. In exchange for their time, I gave them a couple 11×14 mounted art prints from the session.

My first volunteer was this lovely family.

A Sweet Candid – Longmont, CO

When I entered their home, I was so nervous. I haven’t been in Longmont very long and don’t have a reading of the people from this area. But when Jon opened the door and welcomed me inside, I knew I had nothing to worry about.

I set up my newborn photography posing cushion and basket while chatting with Heather and Jon. Their newborn son was wrapped in a light blanket to treat his jaundice. My son had it too, but we stayed in the hospital to have his treated. Maybe it was a symptom of the pandemic to send newborns home to be treated? I was about 5, almost 6 months pregnant at the time, and knew my daughter would likely face jaundice too. How wonderful it would be to spend that time at home with her in Longmont as she worked through it!

As I was warned by my newborn photography mentor, this session took a couple hours to complete. Sweet boy was taking his time, nursing and sleeping. We took several pictures in the basket (his favorite place for the session, where after a few minutes examining his fingers, he drifted off the sleep).

Longmont Newborn Photographer
Curious cutie – Longmont, CO


Moving onto some lifestyle shots, we moved into the master bedroom. I loved the chaos of bedding, bassinet, diapers, and toys in various spots throughout the room. I gathered the family on the bed and watched them interact with each other.

As the newborn photography session wound down, we took a few of my favorite pictures with Heather and Jon holding their newborn in a cute knit sweater and matching pants. I love the details in his little feet next to dad’s wedding band. Those are my favorite kind of details to immortalize.

Longmont Newborn Photographer
All the little details – Longmont, CO



As I left, I called my newborn photography mentor to share just how excited I was with my work and meeting Heather and Jon. I knew I was working toward something fabulous in Longmont, Colorado, as a newborn photographer.

My “Why”

By Kat Knuth

Longmont Family Photographer

I was recently asked by my photography mentor about my “why.” Why am I a photographer? Why did I want to become a photographer?

Why?

I’ve been thinking about how to answer ever since. I could spew some noncommittal nonsense about always loving taking pictures or getting into travel photography while in graduate school. While neither statement is a lie, they don’t get to the heart of the question. They just poke the surface.

So how to answer?

When I was little, looking through pictures was my favorite thing to do. My family moved around a lot and often pictures were how I learned the faces of my relatives. In fact, because my father was deployed when I was a baby, it was how I learned who he was. Every night, my mother and I would say goodnight to his portrait on the wall. When he returned, I was a little over a year old and very much a momma’s girl. I cried when he tried to hold me and clung to my mother’s neck. She pointed to the portrait and back at my father, trying to get me to connect the two. I followed her finger but still wouldn’t go near him. The legend ends when my dad fell asleep on the couch that night and I wandered over to give him a kiss on the cheek.

Longmont Portrait Photographer

Every night, my mother and I would say goodnight to his portrait on the wall.

As I grew older and made friends, pictures were how I remembered what I left behind. My grandmother gave me an antique disk camera when I was around 7 years old that I took everywhere with me. I took pictures of my friends, the world as I saw it, everything. It felt like, packing for a move in a way. Organizing memories into little squares that can be easily transported from one place to another.

I appreciate this need to document my experiences most when I have to reach through my archives to find something. Recently, a friend of mine passed. It was a total shock, as young people’s deaths often are. I immediately went through my digital photos, looking for his face. I needed to see him as I remembered him. I found pictures I’d forgotten taking–smiling, partying, laughing. I sent several to his other friends, eager to share what pieces I’d kept of him with them. In the lead up to his funeral, we all posted some of those pictures on social media, remembering what his friendship meant to us. I wished I’d taken more pictures, kept more of him around, but was so grateful for what I did have.

I guess, to pull all these strings of thought together, photography to me is the ability to share what I experience, however limited in view, with the people I love. Becoming a photographer is how I help others achieve the same. Becoming a photographer in Longmont, Colorado, is just the cherry on top. Who wouldn’t want to take pictures of such lovely people in such a gorgeous state?

To me, you never regret the pictures you take, no matter how good, bad, embarrassing, or ridiculous. But when your memory fades and the people in your photos begin to disappear, that’s when you regret not capturing more moments. As a Longmont family photographer, photography is how I turn irreplaceable memories into art that lasts.

Learning how to Shoot in Manual Mode

By Kat Knuth

Longmont Family Photographer

Like many professional photographers, I’ve been obsessed with taking pictures for a long time, long before becoming a Longmont family photographer. I’ve always been the girl with a camera, capturing everything from party pictures that should have never been taken (sorry college friends) to gorgeous travel scenes I hope I never forget. Along the way, I developed an eye for a good shot, something that only comes with practice.

So, when my husband decided to invest in a Canon DSLR before our honeymoon, I was ecstatic. Finally! I’d have a camera that matched my growing photography skillset! Professional photographer here I come!

In auto mode, I was fantastic but my shots were still only good 50-70% of the time. What gives? Surely the fancy new camera would just…make me a good photographer? That’s all it takes, right?

Not even close.

When my son came along, like many new parents/millennials, I became obsessed with documenting every milestone. I set up elaborate sets in my apartment living room, photographing everything and learning more and more each time. I learned how to light a set indoors, how to adjust my settings to help, how to edit shadows in photoshop if I missed something, etc.

But when something wasn’t working, or my kiddo wasn’t cooperating, I’d abandon what I was learning and switch right back to auto mode.

I’d abandon what I was learning and switch right back to auto mode.

It wasn’t until I became brave enough to post my first model call and begin pursuing photography in Longmont, Colorado, professionally that I really started to understand my camera and how it worked. I was preparing for my first set of models and I took my little family out to Barefoot Lakes in Firestone, Colorado. During the ever so perfect golden hour, I took some of my favorite images I’ve ever shot. Completely in manual mode to make sure I captured all that beautiful golden light, I followed my son around as he explored wildflowers and enjoyed the evening glow.

What I’d photographed…was so lovely, so natural, it didn’t need to be over processed and over produced. It just needed to exist as I shot it.

For the first time when I went back to edit my photos that night, I didn’t overedit. I didn’t have to. What I’d photographed in Firestone, Colorado, was so lovely, so natural, it didn’t need to be over processed and over produced. It just needed to exist as I shot it.

That’s how I prefer to shoot now. I nudge my camera along with the manual settings, usually focusing on aperture, to get the shot I want the first time, before photoshop takes over and I process the images to give them that sweet airbrushed touch. This results in much more natural, true-to-life images that have come to define my style.

So, I’m starting a photography blog

By Kat Knuth
Longmont Family Photographer

Hi! Thank you for stumbling onto my photography blog! I am, as you may have guessed, a photographer in Longmont, Colorado. Since this is my very first of what I hope to be many posts, I thought I’d introduce myself a bit.

I am a 33-year-old, married mom of a beautiful little boy (with a baby girl due this fall!), who isn’t from Longmont. I’m not really from anywhere, to be honest. I moved a lot as a child and when I have to fill out one of those residential history things for background searches, I have to include 27 addresses. Or is it 28 now? Anyway, not the point. Moving around gave me a real appreciation for meeting new people and experiencing different cultures. I’ve loved what I’ve been able to see and do over the course of my life so far.

And I’ve taken pictures of everything!

(Laguna Amarga, Patagonia, Chile. View of Torres Del Paine in the background!)

It was this need to document where I’ve been that led me toward photography in the first place. Travel photography would be the ultimate dream job, but having a young family does tend to make that a little difficult. I know I’ll shared the joy of traveling with them when they’re older but, for now, I’ve meticulously organized my experiences into photo albums and adore the memories they rekindle every time I open one up. It’s actually kind of scary just how organized it all is, though.

Now, I spend most of my time documenting my son’s life. Cheesy, right? I’m just like any other millennial mom in that way. Except, I try my best to remember to use my camera instead of my phone when I’m taking his photograph. When the pandemic hit, this became my way to share how much he was growing with friends and family. Monthly milestone pictures, walking around Longmont (we moved here last June, when everything was still very uncertain), and just playing in the yard all became opportunities to get out my camera and photograph the moment.             

Last fall, I decided to be brave and put myself and my photography out there. I set up a few social media accounts, started following local photographers, and began practicing on friends and family as restrictions eased (and outside locations were available!). I seemed to have stumbled on something that worked for me and my growing family. A lifelong artist and writer, photographer fit right alongside my existing passions and creative outlets. Suddenly, this wasn’t just something I did to keep my memories in meticulous order—this was my art.

I’m still learning. That’s why I started this blog. I have so much to learn and do in order to grow as (hopefully) Longmont’s best family and newborn photographer.

Thanks for coming along with me as I figure this out!