This is Lisa’s family — and today is worth remembering

The youngest does most of her living at full throttle. One minute she’s tearing down the hallway on her scooter, the next she’s diving under the bed mid–hide and seek. Then, just as quickly, there’s a quiet moment with the cat. A good portion of it happening in her jocks.

Meanwhile, her sister is equal parts chaos, equal parts magic.

This is a Your Story session. And this is exactly what those sessions are for.

When Lisa opened the door to her Geelong home, she invited me into the full, beautiful chaos of life. The house felt light and bright. Modern, colourful, alive. There’s a photo wall that stops you in your tracks. And more importantly, there’s a family who clearly adore each other.

A family of four on their bed, photographed through a doorway in black and white, capturing a quiet and real moment at home during a Your Story session, Surf Coast Victoria 2025.
A young girl rides a scooter at full speed down a bright hallway while her sister chases and her mother watches on, captured during a documentary family photography session in Geelong 2025
A young girl lies on the couch in black and white, arms wrapped around the family black cat who gazes out the window, captured during a documentary family photography session in Geelong 2025.

What a Your Story session actually looks like

People sometimes ask what happens during a Your Story session. The honest answer is that life happens. I just bring my camera.

For this family, that meant watching the girls tear through the house on the scooter while the cats observed from a safe distance. It also mean being in the kitchen while pizza dough was being thrown across a flour-dusted bench. Then came portraits in front of that photo wall, which warms the heart because you can feel how much photographs matter to these people. In between all of that, I found myself sitting in the middle of a hide and seek game where nobody was particularly trying to hide.

Eventually we made it outside to the trampoline, where the competitiveness of the keepy-uppy situation became very clear, very quickly. Fully committed. I loved every second of it.

By that point, they had forgotten the camera was even there.

A family of four laughs in front of a large gallery wall of framed family photos, kids on parents shoulders, captured during a documentary family photography session in Geelong 2025.
A young girl walks through the hallway carrying two large stuffed animals while her sister plays on the floor in the next room, captured in black and white during a documentary family photography session in Geelong 2025.
A young girl leans against a wall printed with the words I Am Kind, I Am Loved, I Am Worthy, holding a stuffed bunny, while her sister stands beside her, captured in black and white during a documentary family photography session in Geelong 2025.

Why home changes everything

One of the biggest reasons I love documenting Your Story sessions at home is because you are instantly more comfortable. You know where everything is. You know which corner of the couch is yours. You know the light in the kitchen at that time of day. And every part of the space is yours to show or not. There’s no pressure to perform, because you’re already home.

That comfort shows up in the images every single time.

A young girl hangs upside down on an indoor gymnastics bar while her mother watches with delight and her father looks on with mild concern, captured during a documentary family photography session in Geelong 2025.
Overhead shot of a father's hands shaping dough beside a small child's hand reaching in to help, on a flour-covered kitchen bench, captured during a documentary family photography session in Geelong 2025.

The girls, in and out of their shells

These two were a study in beautiful contradictions.

One minute they were introducing me to their favourite teddies. The next, they had disappeared into their own world entirely, completely unbothered as they played. One had a crown on. The other was sitting with the enormous, life-changing news that she was about to start school. Then they’d both pull back into themselves again, just kids being kids, brilliant and free.

That oscillation, between wanting to be seen and forgetting they were being watched, is one of my favourite things to photograph. I never push through it. Instead, I just wait, and it always opens back up.

A young girl with curly hair tears down a long bright hallway with her hands outstretched and a wild grin on her face, captured during a documentary family photography session in Geelong 2025.
A girl in pink with headphones and a yellow basket walks past the gymnastics bar where her younger sister perches, while their father watches from the background, captured during a documentary family photography session in Geelong 2025.
Completely unbothered. Your Story session, Geelong 2025.

The photo wall moment

I want to stay here for a second, because it genuinely moved me.

This family has photographs everywhere. Real ones, printed and framed and lived alongside every single day. That tells you everything you need to know about who they are and what they value. So when it came to standing the girls in front of that wall for portraits, it felt like the most honest thing I could have done in that house. Photography isn’t decoration for this family. Rather, it’s how they hold onto things.

A young girl in an Elsa costume pushes a polka dot doll pram across a concrete floor in front of a large gallery wall of family photos, captured in black and white during a documentary family photography session in Geelong 2025.
A mother laughs with her mouth wide open as her daughter clings to her back and her partner grins while their other daughter hangs off his shoulders, captured in front of a gallery wall during a documentary family photography session in Geelong 2025.
A young girl wearing a superhero mask sits at a dining table looking sideways at the camera with a knowing smile, her mother and sister visible in the background in front of a large gallery wall, captured in black and white during a documentary family photography session in Geelong 2025.

Why today matters

The girls won’t always scooter down that hallway. They won’t always be this small, this loud, or this brilliantly free. One of them is about to start school, which is its own kind of chapter ending and beginning all at once. The cats won’t always be the same age. And the house, like everything, will eventually change.

That’s the whole point of a Your Story session. Not to create something perfect, but to preserve something real. So that ten years from now, this family can look at these images and smell the smells, hear the giggles, and feel the sun coming through the windows of that lounge room on the Tuesday when everything was exactly this.

A family of four sits on the front steps of a heritage home in black and white, one daughter on her father's shoulders, the other leaning against her mother, captured during a documentary family photography session in Geelong 2025.

Is a Your Story session right for you?

These sessions aren’t just for families with little ones, though if your kids are growing so fast it feels almost cruel, then yes, please book one now. Your Story sessions are for anyone who wants to remember today. Elderly parents in the family home they’ve lived in for decades. Couples who read on the couch and cook together on Sunday mornings. A woman and her cat. A house full of people, noise, and life.

It doesn’t have to be a big occasion. Because today, as it is, is already enough.

If you’re based on the Surf Coast or in Geelong and you’ve been sitting on the idea of a Your Story session, I would love to hear from you. Let’s document your chapter.

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