A note on privacy

Family photography in the Cotswolds | Laurine.co.uk
Privacy-first, offline-minded photography for families who value discretion.

This is something I have been thinking about for a long time, and with the fast growth of AI and consequently, awareness of online privacy, it feels right to finally put it into words.

Family photography has always been about the client for me. About being invited into someone’s space, their routines, and their relationships. Whether I am photographing a family in their own home or in a public park, a family trusts me to photograph their personal bond and respect their privacy.

Over the years, more and more people I work with have spoken openly about wanting their images to remain private and offline. They want photographs for their walls, albums, their children’s future. They want to remember how this period in their lives felt, without feeling the need to share it with the rest of the world. I understand that desire deeply, as I share these values when it comes to my own family. It makes sense to want some parts of life to stay private.

As a photographer, privacy is not something I add on at the end of a session as a quick “let’s put a password on your digital gallery”. It shapes how I work from the very beginning. It influences how I book in clients and how I talk to them, how I photograph, how I edit. It affects what I share and what I keep private, even when I have full permission to share. Your images are made for you first. Always.

When children are involved, that feeling becomes even stronger. Your kids’ photographs are deeply personal and effectively have nothing to do with me. I believe children deserve photographs that honour who they are, without turning them into content. I’m really grateful to parents when I am allowed to share a few images of their children on my website and business socials, so I can showcase my work to other parents. But I also want to say this clearly. I never assume permission.

Many of the families and couples I work with choose not to share their images publicly at all, and that choice is fully respected. There is no pressure and no expectation. Your photographs do not owe my business anything. If you see your images on my website and you would rather I take them down? Also totally fine!

When nothing is being created for sharing with an audience, there is room to be yourself 100%. Children settle more quickly. Parents start to relax. The session becomes less about being seen and more about just being together and having fun. I capture a double chin or an awkward smile or two… so what? Those are the moments that tend to last!

This approach also shapes how your images are delivered to you. I care about the way photographs arrive into your hands. About the experience of opening them up, holding them, sharing them with the person sitting next to you, returning to them over time. Physical photographs matter to me because they invite you to look again and again, rather than scroll past.

I feel grateful every time someone trusts me with something so personal. That trust is not something I take lightly. It is part of how I see client work and part of how I choose to show up for the people I photograph.

If this resonates with you, I would love to talk!

Laurine