On Saturday October 2, I visited my least favorite place in the world. No, it wasn’t my dentist’s chair (I went today), or a squat toilet in Beijing (ack!). It was Chuck E Cheese, my version of hell on earth.

Yet the reason for the visit was a good one: a birthday party for my friend’s young daughter.

The kidlet and I showed up that evening to get our party groove on. I brought along The Precious to see what I could capture in that evil boisterous place. Surprisingly the results aren’t too shabby.





My kid, of course:

Back to the party:



I even got some good portraits:

This shot was worth the whole headache of being in Chuck E Cheese in the first place:

It even looks good in B&W:

Pretty good for no flash and hellacious lighting, right?

  • Jamila Muhammad - I WISH you were here to photograph my three girls! 🙂 You make their personalities come alive while still making for a nice composition. Maybe if we come into some money we can afford to fly you down 😉ReplyCancel

    • Liana - No need for me to fly. I’ll take Amtrak or drive! You say the word. 🙂ReplyCancel

  • Julie - Stunning!!!ReplyCancel

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The fun folks at Love That Shot are having a contest that I just couldn’t resist. The goal is to shoot and show your favorite face.

Well that was pretty darn easy for me. My favorite face belongs to my absolutely adorable daughter, Zara. And last night during bathtime, I couldn’t resist getting some new shots of my favorite face ever.

This one is my contest entry:
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But I couldn’t resist sharing some of the others!
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These shots were tricky considering the typically abysmal bathroom lighting, but I shot at f1.4, SS1/400 & ISO 1000. There were terrible color issues despite my having used my BaLens for a custom white balance, but I think I got most of them worked out in PS. I also wanted to make sure that there were no, um, bits showing. But other than a little midtone lift, I processed them clean.

Can you see why she’s my favorite face?

  • Jess - Hi,I saw this on the link-up page and thought, wow that is great lighting/color for a bathtub shot! I was imagining a bathroom with crazy beautiful windows, so seeing this just might inspire me to give it a go again. I think you did a great job cleaning up the color issues. Great job, and what a cutie!ReplyCancel

    • Liana - Thanks so much! This bathroom has a tiny window and the photos were taken long after dark, so I wasn’t sure how they would come out. But I’m glad the for the most part I managed to get things corrected. Thank goodness I took MCP Actions color correction class!ReplyCancel

  • Colette - These are just gorgeous. I was paroozing Clickin Moms and saw this face which I recognized from my Karen Russell class. YOU are soooo good! You have an adorable subject, tooo!!ReplyCancel

  • Carol - Zara is very comfortable in front of the camera. Great shots Liana. Love the wink!ReplyCancel

  • hope - she’s a dollReplyCancel

  • Neeroc - LOVE the third one down! I am very impressed. ISO1000 and no grain? Did you have to fiddle with that at all? Oh and 50mm? I’m lusting after a 50mm…ReplyCancel

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My last shoot was a fabulous, wonderful time
Spent capturing of sisters aged 11 and 9

Though close in age these two obviously were
In personality is where they seemed to differ

The elder girl quiet, winsome and graceful
The younger one gamine, spunky and playful

In photos a plenty I’ve captured the pair
Displaying for their parents each one’s unique flair

So, my blog readers I hope that you’ll bestow
An oooh and an ahhh for each great photo

And pretty, pretty please if only you would
Leave some gushy comment love for them if you could

(Forgive me…I just finished reading Dr. Seuss to my kidlet.)







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On Saturday August 21st, I showed up at my client’s house to shoot my first 3 year old who wasn’t my daughter. She eagerly ran out to meet me with her green dress and brown hair flying behind her. Piece of cake, I thought as I unpacked my props and pettiskirts. This will be so simple.

Two hours later, I left having been put in my place by that amazing thing called toddler will. The biggest lesson of the day was…when a toddler says that she wants to go swimming about 15 minutes into the shoot, you let her!

Here are some great captures of little L:








Hooray! She happily goes to the pool!

She is such a beautiful little girl!

  • Arlene - Michelle, OMG she is so beautiful – a cookie cutter image of you. Thanks for sharingReplyCancel

  • Neeroc - They are fantastic! Let me know if you ever happen to be passing through Ottawa with camera in hand…ReplyCancel

  • Kellie - OMG, beautiful. Her eyes are just so expressive. You did an awesome job capturing her playfulness and beauty.ReplyCancel

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I’ve been on a trip over 8000 miles away from home visiting one of my favorite places, South Africa. Though I’ve been twice to Cape Town, I had not yet had the pleasure of a stay in Johannesburg. While there, I took a tour of the township of Soweto, the site of a major Apartheid-era uprising among schoolchildren.

There you can find wealthy and middle class homes right near the tiny shacks of the poorer sections. The people of Motsoaledi allowed us tourists to visit them in their homes. I was very torn about such a tour as it felt as though we were intruding and treating them as if they were an attraction in the zoo. Yet the people were so welcoming and the tours did provide some financial help for the community.

But the kids! The kids reacted to my camera as if it were magnetic. They swarmed to have their pictures taken, as long as I showed them the image on the LCD screen afterwards.

Here are a few captures:


Check out the full gallery: Children of Soweto

  • Kelsey Anderson - These are wonderful images!ReplyCancel

    • Liana - Thanks, Kelsey! And thanks for visiting.ReplyCancel

  • Shannon Flores - Great captures! The little boy with the scar seems angry 🙁ReplyCancel

    • Liana - I think he was adopting a hard/gangsta pose because he certainly was clamoring to be in the picture. 🙂ReplyCancel

  • Kelly Q - They are so sweet!ReplyCancel

    • Liana - They were great kids, but such poverty. It just broke my heart. I gave the girl in most of the photos 50R and she bought treats for all the kids to share.ReplyCancel

  • Melissa M. - I love that they wanted to see the shots after posing! Great job!ReplyCancel

    • Liana - It was such a special treat for them! You should have seen the horde of kids who swarmed me in Cape Town! So many kept jumping into the shots that many have a lot of OOF kids in the foreground.ReplyCancel

  • Jenn Campbell - These are amazing. Such great expressions and emotion! It must have been an amazing trip.ReplyCancel

    • Liana - Thank you! It was indeed a great trip. I cannot wait to return.ReplyCancel

  • Jenn D, - These are beautiful. It is amazing how much a photograph can speak, even though there aren’t any words. I bet it was an amazing trip.ReplyCancel

  • Angela - These are amazing captures. You can just see the emotion and personality in each of them.ReplyCancel

  • Christy F - This post is so moving, and great images to boot!ReplyCancel

  • sqpeggy - I love these photos! So expressive- those eyes in the last one are totally hypnotizing. And in the second one down, the look on that boy’s face on the far right is great– actually the evolution of his expressions is also interesting: first he’s in the background, then he’s closer but not sure about that punchy kid, then he decides to stay but he keeps his guard up. It tells a story.ReplyCancel

  • Crystal - Awesome!!ReplyCancel

  • Melissa K - Gorgeous captures, and gorgeous children!ReplyCancel

  • Annie Pennington - What an amazing opoortunity to travel and get to photograph these wonderful children. Beautiful work!!ReplyCancel

  • Mandy - I love these. Truly tells a story. Love!ReplyCancel

  • monica - These are such moving shots. The kids all have such soulful eyes!!ReplyCancel

  • JennyO - I love these images. As Monica said above me, they are very moving.ReplyCancel

  • Becca - I adore every single one of these pictures! What beautiful shots and beautiful kids 🙂 I love your site too!ReplyCancel

  • Allison - Oh they are beautiful, thanks for sharing!ReplyCancel

  • Tammy - Oh, these are just amazing. I love the depth the images have, excellent work!ReplyCancel

  • Brun - I am from South Africa! (Home language Afrikaans) These are really good, the little bit of a chocolate colour works really well with these photos, almost a journalistic feel.ReplyCancel

  • Hilary - What an incredible journey!!! Stunning images!ReplyCancel

  • Pamela Topping - Beautiful photos! I’ve always wanted to visit South Africa.ReplyCancel

  • Jen P. - Fantastic captures! Amazing work!ReplyCancel

  • Kimberlee - These are wonderful!ReplyCancel

  • tanja - great images! yet so sad and disturbing! I think we in the US (and any other western country) forget all to quick how many children are in need and povertyReplyCancel

  • Stacey M - This sounds like it was an amazing experience for you. To see and meet resilient children of the world. Their faces are just beautiful.ReplyCancel

  • Jennifer Lauren - Amazing captures and opportunity to be surrounded by such sweethearts, really love the 4th one!ReplyCancel

  • Neeroc - They are so beautiful! Wonderful eye Liana.ReplyCancel

  • shannon - these are really wonderful!ReplyCancel

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