Categories
Photography The Basics Tips & Tricks

8 Tips for Getting the Best Vacation Photos Ever

8 tips to get the best vacation photos ever

You’ve planned, organized, packed, sweated, and agonized over creating the best possible vacation for your family. Now that its here and you are going, how are you going to remember it? Photos of course. Here are 8 tips to help you get the best vacation photos ever:

1. Wait for the good light.
As I look through the hundreds of photos I’ve taken over the last few months, my favorites are always the ones during golden hour. In fact, I often plan our outings after or during dinner (bring a picnic!) to make sure we get good lighting. Beautiful back-lighting, gorgeous scenery, and cute kids. Always turn your subject away from the sun so they are not squinting.

IMG_3675-Edit copy

2. Let your kids just be kids.
The last thing you want when you get home is a folder full of your kids with cheesy smiles in front of various national landmarks. I don’t know about you, but my kids don’t smile all the time (or look at the camera) and it would be an unnatural reflection of whatever vacation we were on. Capture your kids pensive, silly, enjoying the moment or even the tantrum your 2 year old throws when she is exhausted.goblin valley 2013_006_WEB

3. Take photos of the details.
Thinking like a wedding photographer, I LOVE details. Signs, small hands holding a flower, the little things that happen. Too often I’m shooting with my wide angle lens capturing the entire scene and then all of my photos look the same. Mix it up. Shoot wide and then narrow in. I’m always amazed at how differently a scene can look depending on which part you focus on.

IMG_3208-Edit copy

4. Have your camera handy.
Nothing is worse than missing THAT moment because you are digging through your purse looking for the camera. Use a sling bag, a Capture Pro, or something similar so that your camera is accessible but not in the way.

Peak Design Capture Pro with Cuff

5. Get on the other side of the camera.
I’m probably the WORST at this. No one can take photos as good as I can, so therefore I have to keep the camera the whole time. Right? Wrong. Poor kids are going to think they never had a mother. Hand the camera off – even if it won’t be an award winning photo (but really, you never know) at least you’ll be in it.

On the other side, it also helps to have a husband who takes awesome photos with his camera phone.

6a46646c5edb11e3bb44125da3cb3f33_86. Don’t forget the extra batteries!
Or the battery charger. Or your memory cards. Totally guilty of that. Nothing spoils the moment by stressing about running out of battery or not being able to use your camera at all.

7. Try a Different Perspective.
Sometimes I’ll look around online and see the same photos of famous places. How can you take that photo differently? Get down low, hold your camera up over your head, try off to one side. Experiment around until you find a unique perspective. Make the photos YOURS, not just a copy of someone else’s.

7.5 Direct but Don’t Pose.
I find there is a distinct difference. The photo below didn’t just happen. One of my kids was sitting there and I thought it looked like a sweet shot, so I asked everyone else to go sit down too. Then I said “just look at each other” or maybe it was “everyone look at each other” or “look at the Washington Monument”. I can’t remember exactly. I let them be themselves but in a place that made sense for my photo. My kids have gotten SO good at “everyone look at each other and laugh” that it makes ME laugh every time now too.

IMG_1022IMG_00388. Be flexible and just let moments happen. 
Some of our BEST photo opportunities have happened when we least expected or when we deviated from “the plan”. Whether it is taken a few extra minutes to pull of the side of the road because the sunset is just amazing, hiking just another half mile, or letting your kids make and then jump in a pile of leaves in Independence Square, those photos can end up being your favorites because they weren’t planned. Along the same line is to just let things happen. Don’t be in a rush, let the moment play out. Be Patient. Good photos come to those that wait.

IMG_2170-Edit copy

There you have it! All my secrets. 🙂 What advice or tips do you have for me?

 

Categories
This Week on Instagram

Tuscon, Boondocking with Friends, and Saguaro National Park

This Week on Instagram January 25-31

Travel Dates: January 25-31, 2014

We’ve had a busy week! We finished up our time at City of Rocks in NM and traveled on to Tuscon, Arizona to stay with some college friends. We LOVE visiting with friends, and using their waffle irons to make breakfast isn’t so bad either. 🙂 Sam also managed to lock us out of the Airstream (spare key locked in the truck with THOSE keys in the Airstream. Yeah. We’re good like that.), but AAA came to the rescue.

After a little sight seeing, and a haircut for Jess, we ended up at Snyder Hill on some BLM land with two other Airstreamers! We met Malimish & Aluminarium who introduced us to boondocking and the boys chatted about solar power for 2 days straight. We managed to squeeze in a trip to Saguaro National Park for the 5 kids to earn their Junior Ranger Badges and to check out the largest cacti we’ve ever seen. After running out of power and waking up to a cloudy morning, we said goodbye and traveled an hour north to Picacho State Park where we could plug in. We hope to add solar panels to our set up soon, but until then we’ll just have to keep the boondocking to a minimum.

Whew. There you have it in a nutshell. Look for posts detailing our group camping and visit to the National Park coming soon!

Categories
Homeschool

How We Turned Our Kids Into Awesome Readers

How We Turned Our Kids into Great Readers

Back at the brick & mortar “Lehi House” I would take weekly trips to the library with the kids. We’d listen to story time, check out a handful of new books, maybe read one or two while we were there and be one our way. I’m pretty sure I didn’t look at those books until the next time we went to the library and repeated our routine. The kids read them at night while they were winding down for sleep, but I can probably count on one hand the amount of times I actually sat down with them to read. I think it took Andrew & I at least six weeks to go through one Secrets of Droon book, and there were a few we never actually finished.

Somehow, somewhere along this most recent journey of ours, a light bulb turned on in their little brains and now I can’t get books fast enough for them. There are three  factors I contribute to the voraciousness with which our kids now devour books. Whether it was purely by accident, or some genius, subconscious parenting move on our part, we are definitely happy with the outcome. Here they are in no particular order:

1. Reading with Our Kids
When we made the trip out East and settled in the “Virginia House” (as we now call it) Sam decided that in order for him & Rachel to reach their goal of finishing the Book of Mormon before her baptism they really needed to start reading. A lot. So, every evening after Cara was in bed, the two of them would sit down and read for about 30 minutes. After about a week, Andrew started getting jealous and asked if WE could read something together instead of me just putting him to be early. “Oh,” I thought. “Why not?” Best decision I ever made.

Andrew & I started consuming books together. It helps that his reading skills have vastly improved over the last 6 months. He’s definitely reading on at least a 1st grade if not 2nd grade level at age 6. We plowed through at least a dozen Secrets of Droon books and we both looked forward to the evenings when we would read together.

Fast forward to life in the Airstream. Cara goes to bed at 7:30pm and the other two at 8:30pm, but they all share the same room. Naturally, we need to be semi-quiet after Cara’s gone to bed so she’ll fall asleep before the other two climb back there about an hour later. What do you do with 2 kids in 188 sq feet when you need to be fairly quiet? You read! This time we switched kids. I started reading books like Ella Enchanted, Wizard of Oz, and Chronicles of Narnia with Rachel, while Sam got a turn reading Secrets of Droon & Harry Potter with Andrew. We love it. Where before it seemed like a chore to sit down and read with my kids, now it is something we all look forward too. Do we ready EVERY night without fail? Of course not. Sometimes we’ll play a game, or the kids will all stay up late watching a movie, but I’d say at least 5 nights a week we read.

2. The Kindle
The second factor I credit with helping our kids become great readers is the Kindle. Its fascinating to an 8 and 6 year old. They would read just to be reading on the Kindle because it was THAT cool. I have an older one we purchased years ago, and Santa brought me a new Kindle Paperwhite for Christmas so now we have two. If I’m not particularly engrossed in a book, I’ll let them both pick a book and use their own device. Otherwise they just have to take turns.

How do we get new books? Most public libraries have subscribed to some sort of Overdrive system where you can borrow digital library books. Amazon Prime also lets you borrow 1 book for free each month (Harry Potter is our current on-loan book). Having lived in two different states, we have library cards for both Utah and Virginia which is convenient because each library limits the number of borrowed books to 5.  We also have a collection of physical Roald Dahl books (Christmas present from Grandma), some Secrets of Droon, and other Princess or Marvel stories we’ve collected. Most of the time, however,  I can’t get new books on the Kindle fast enough. They’ll easily go through some of the shorter chapter books in a few hours.
Young Girl Reading Kindle PaperWhite

3. Sheer Boredom
This is the best one. When our kids have nothing else to do and I won’t let them play the tablet or watch a movie, I casually suggest they read. Most of the time they’ll take me up on it. They will also bring books in the car and read as we drive (thankfully they don’t get car sick). The sheer lack of anything else interesting to do often motivates them to turn to a book. Perfect.

Young Boy Reading Kindle

Reading with our kids has turned them into great readers. Whether the books are digital or physical, done out of sheer boredom or because they love whatever book they’re reading I’m grateful for it.

Categories
This Week on Instagram

This Week on Instagram: January 18-24, 2014

This Week on Instagram Jan 18-24

We made it to New Mexico! After a brief stint with a sick 3 year old, we landed in Brantley Lake State Park outside of Carlsbad, New Mexico. We spent a great few days there, explored the caves, earned another junior ranger badge and enjoyed the sunrises. We also drove through White Sands National Monument and the kids enjoyed “sanding” (sledding) down the dunes. Who knew that this tucked in, fairly forgotten state could be so beautiful?
Have a great week!

Categories
Daily Life The Airstream

Having Friends Over to Play

IMG_3716-Edit copyOne of the things I think my kids & I both miss are play dates. The kind where the moms get to sit on the couch and chat while the kids run around and play like cray for hours. There are a few friends back home where life is easier when they are over. The kids will just flit from one activity to the next with very little prompting leaving me to relax.

Having that kind of an experience while traveling and living in an Airstream is less common, but definitely still a possibility as we discovered while hanging out in Houston.

We have a lot of friends around the country – and while we get to courtesy park with most of them (it makes it easier to stay up all night talking when the kids can go to bed) sometimes schedules just don’t work out. We tried to meet up with some college friends on our way in to the Houston area, but my friend, Paige, wasn’t feeling so great so we postponed it to “later”. Well, Christmas came and went and while we were down in Brazos Bend State Park, Paige & her kids decided to come visit!

Honestly, I was nervous about entertaining six kids in 188 square feet. Not even 188 sq feet as Sam was working on the bedroom end. Did I mention that was also the week it was freezing cold and windy outside? We managed a short walk around the lake before everyone’s fingers and toes were frozen and we retreated to the warmth of the Airstream. Paige has 3 kids around the same ages as mine, so we pulled out some toys and let them climb over the couches and bed steering airplanes and cars over the furniture. Sam actually had to join a Skype meeting so he retreated to the truck so he could actually hear what was being said.

The consensus? Fairly chaotic, yet lots of fun! Paige & I got to chat (and occasionally break up a dispute) while the kids played, and we even fed everyone lunch! Totally going to pat myself on the back for that one. We LOVED having visitors over, and it was fun to share our space with friends. While it wasn’t hours on end, I definitely enjoyed my hour and a half of mommy chat time. If we are ever in your area, don’t be afraid to send us a message and set up a play date!

IMG_3701-Edit copy