Showing posts with label family. Show all posts
Showing posts with label family. Show all posts

Thursday, 13 November 2014

Christmas Family Life Gift Vouchers


We have put together some gift vouchers for Family Life photo shoots, which would make wonderful Christmas presents for either yourself and your household, or close relatives and friends. Maybe a relative has recently had a new arrival; or equally, it's lovely for people of all ages: young couples (and their pets!), older or retired couples who have hobbies they enjoy doing together, "crafty" people, those who maybe indulge in creating artwork at home. 

The vouchers will be presented in a beautiful, hand-finished (by us!) recycled card gift box and can be sent either to you, or straight to the recipient by first-class post. 

We currently have a 25% reduction on both packages, saving up to £138, which are as follows: 


Full Day        £550    £410

* 5 Hours of photography between 9am and 9pm (taken as a block)
* Both Ellie and David photographing
* Approximately 50 fully-edited photographs - both high and low res
* A large, high-quality photo-book with approx. 30 of the best images from the day


Half Day £400   £300

* 3 Hours of photography between 9am and 9pm (taken as a block)
* Both Ellie and David photographing
* Approximately 25 fully-edited photographs - both high and low res
* A large, high-quality photo-book with approx. 20 of the best images from the day


If you'd like to make an enquiry about booking for yourself or a friend, please email us at gwynne.gibbons@gmail.com. The special prices are available until 31st December 2014 and can be redeemed throughout 2015. 











Monday, 3 November 2014

Why Family Life photography?

Probably the photography work closest to our hearts is our “Family Life” concept that we have been developing over the last 18 months or so. I’d like to talk a little about why we have chosen to move in this direction and why we feel it is so important and meaningful.

When we as people really think about what is the most valuable time in our family lives, often we might initially think “holidays!”, time away from work or just relaxing. But if we really look deeply into what the feeling is behind those things, it is almost always because we do those things with the people we love most, our immediate family members. Holidays are special because there is nobody and no situation that needs to draw you away from those people for the week or two or three that we might have “away”. We sometimes overlook the most obvious time, and I think the most important of all: the day-to-day lives of family units. This is the glue that binds everything together; the threads of meaning and belonging that weave our sense of wellbeing, purpose, and bring the most lasting joy to ourselves and our loved ones. And of course, the vast majority of this happens in the home.

At home we also have all the things – mementos, gifts and cards, the washing drying on clothes-horses or radiators, our own beds, photograph albums – that make the house a home and the central point of our family lives. Everything happens there! From cooking and cleaning to loving embraces, game-playing, potty-training, tantrums and laughter.

There are so many photographers who do an excellent job of photographing families, but 99% of the time these photos are taken in a relatively alien environment away from the home. If we think about it, so much of what we call “ourselves” exists as much as anything else in our environment; so if you take the family out of the environment, you aren’t really capturing the whole picture.

Another really important point is that while one family-member can photograph the others, there is practically no opportunity for the family to see itself as a whole – the whole dynamic of the family-unit. And of course these photos are usually posed: “Say cheese!”… which is certainly a lovely way of producing a certain kind of memento, but is completely other to what we achieve with our work.

What happens

On the day of the photography, we arrive at your house at the agreed time. We will have asked you when is a good time to come based on when you think you will be doing things together which you really enjoy or you would especially like to be captured. There is no posing here!

We simply ask that you continue with your normal pattern for the day, while we interfere as little as possible, simply observing and intuitively photographing. Cooking, eating, playing with the children, playing games together, reading; whatever you normally do, just do it. We will be there to get those special moments.

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We are extremely excited about developing this work further. We enjoy nothing more in our work than to see the connections between people, and we find that nowhere is this more apparent or more touching than in the case of a loving family in its own environment.

To enquire further about Family Life photography, please contact us at gwynne.gibbons@gmail.com, or send us a message at our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/gwynne.gibbons.artists



Thursday, 23 October 2014

Otto

Every home should have an Otto-cat. He’s fluffy, silky and soft to the touch, and always manages to lighten any feelings of tension after a long day at work. His mother is a black and white cat who followed David and I home after a short evening walk back in 2012; I was living with my mom at the time who (surprisingly!) allowed her to come and live with us. My younger sister, Kate, named her Tiggy, and it wasn’t long before her stomach began to swell with the promise of some cat-babies… A few months later, David and I had moved into a new house and were eagerly awaiting the arrival of the kittens since we’d already decided that we’d love for one of them to come and live with us. It was a Sunday when I received the excited phone-call from Kate announcing the arrival of the kittens – four tiny, squirming, black and white babies. We asked to have the cat that was had the most black on it, since David had always loved black cats. 

We had already decided on the name Otto (a German boy’s name) beforehand, and we got to bond with him when we visited my mom over the following weeks. He came to live with us at Christmas-time in 2012 when he was around 10-weeks-old, and he has been a most welcome member of our family ever since. We’ve enjoyed watching him grow up over the last couple of years, maturing into a strong, spirited - and extremely hungry - cat: he never stops thinking about food…but then again, neither do we, so we are definitely three of a kind.



October is Otto's birthday month and this year he has turned two, so today we thought we'd share some of our favourite Otto-photos to celebrate. Over time, we’ve come to realise how common Otto’s markings are, spotting numerous ‘Otto clones’ (as we call them!) in photos in the Internet; it always makes us chuckle. We know that having a cat with unusual markings is usually preferred, but for us, Otto is the most perfect cat in the world - he's 'our' cat and we are 'his' humans :) 


Ellie