Becoming parents changes you in ways no one can prepare you for. When you’re also destination wedding photographers who spend months on the road, the shift is even bigger.
After Alma was born, our life as a couple, parents, and business owners completely transformed. From navigating sleepless nights and postpartum recovery to getting back to shooting multi-day weddings in Italy, these first three months taught us more about life, work, and love than we ever imagined.
If you’re a photographer, creative, or soon-to-be parent trying to figure out how to balance it all, this is for you. We’re sharing the real, unfiltered truth—no sugarcoating, no fluffy Instagram version.
I’ve always been deeply in tune with my body, and I knew something was different right away. My usual morning espresso suddenly didn’t appeal to me. I craved pasta—lots of it—and for the first time ever, I didn’t want wine. That’s when I knew.
A week later, the test confirmed it: we were pregnant.
Unlike many couples, we didn’t go through months or years of trying. We were lucky—it happened quickly. But that didn’t make the journey simple.
Running a destination wedding photography business while pregnant came with unique challenges. Shooting 12-hour wedding days, traveling across Italy, and keeping up with editing schedules required careful planning.
I downloaded an app to track my cycle so I could time the pregnancy around wedding season. We wanted to avoid delivering in the middle of our busiest months—June through September—when most of our Lake Como weddings, Amalfi elopements, and Tuscany multi-day events happen.
Even with planning, the first trimester was tough:
Nothing prepares you for labor. Mine lasted 60 hours. There were contractions, hospital trips, epidurals, tears, and endless waiting. Every woman’s story is unique, and mine was intense—but it also showed me what my body was capable of.
That moment when Alma finally arrived changed everything. From that point forward, life had a new purpose.
Five weeks postpartum, we were photographing a five-day destination wedding on the Amalfi Coast. Was I ready? Physically, maybe. Mentally, I wasn’t sure. But we made it work.
Here’s what helped us balance newborn life and wedding photography:
It wasn’t perfect, but it was real.
Breastfeeding quickly became a full-time job on its own. Between feeding Alma every two hours and pumping during events, I had to adjust everything about how we worked.
I learned to:
This wasn’t something anyone talks about when they picture luxury destination wedding photography. But it’s the reality of being a photographer and a mom.
The hardest part of these three months wasn’t the exhaustion—it was finding myself again.
I’m a mom. I’m a photographer. I’m a business owner. All three identities compete for attention, and some days one wins over the others.
Here’s what helped me feel grounded:
Becoming parents while running a business taught us more than any course or coaching program ever could:
If you’re a wedding photographer, creative entrepreneur, or business owner thinking about starting a family, here’s our biggest advice:
This post is just a glimpse of our journey. In the latest episode of the Say Cheese Podcast, we open up about: