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who is she

Virginia standing in a flower field with her camera in hand
holding hands with her son

Hi I am Virginia! 

My approach

"I know firsthand what it feels like to grieve the version of our children that is already gone, while also celebrating the joy of who they are becoming in the very next season."

Your story isn’t staged — it’s lived.


My approach is interactive and observant, focusing on the in-between moments that reveal who you really are. I’ll guide you just enough so you feel comfortable, but leave space for real connection to unfold. The result? Photographs that feel like memories — rich with texture, full of warmth, and perfectly imperfect.

Expect to slow down. To hold your children a little closer. To laugh, breathe, and maybe even cry. I believe these photographs are more than images — they are a pause for connection, a way to remember what this season feels like long after it’s passed. If this is something you have been dreaming of, tell me more about yourself by filling out the form below.

A little about me

a young boy running into his mothers arms in a flower field.

I grew up primarily in the south- but have traveled all over the world. My husband is from Brazil, and together we have two Brazilian-American little boys and a lab puppy. I am been documenting people for 10+ years, and have honed in my craft of creating timeless memories with families. 

I know firsthand what it feels like to grieve the version of our children that’s already gone, while also celebrating the joy of who they’re becoming in the very next season. When we are wrapped up in giggles, tiny hands, warm snuggles, or milestones that feel too big and too beautiful to put into words, we often wish we could hold onto them just a little longer. Photos are the closest thing we have to encapsulating that.

A photograph becomes something you can hold—a memory you can return to as many times as you want.

That’s what I’m focusing on during your session: documenting your family with intentionality, care, honesty, and beauty—so you can remember not just what it looked like, but exactly how it felt.

a mother warmly embracing her daughter and kissing he cheek in black and white.
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