![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEimApHwq5MMHSP73vSMq8eNCZYvq24wrPo3o061sD5krx0zeCBWnV_6ePtTUl12yKmeqALL3AHQ2_5R7VGBKtytMT9fBEOvFNPZZnEjrxAdzVrpK2McuCGVelUZRwlql9rdP_7zIZfj4IPP/s400/Pete-23.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiCUP-2vTV1MOaP9rZ2cSC4nZa3X3MTqvYS-M5gi42d52KvOzAkByh06ue5_LMg_m0t-cWmDJAM9BmZUV7pNKBVoYQ8VcGka0pQQon42NrEZLTjNagstZSFGDuuu4sz1I3RkSQkJ6hBCa0J/s400/Pete-7.jpg)
i thought about dropping a note to all those curious about my style of photography. i'd have to say i like to capture people and moments in exactly the way they happen: unplanned, unposed, unpredicted. while i do love a good studio composition with the old clock and the kid in the basket, i also love the tender interaction between parents and baby during a little outfit change, or the unexpected nap during the photo shoot, or simply the hands of the proud dad holding his first born baby boy. i believe those are the kinds of pictures that will be the most memorable 30 years from now, when the baby boy is grown and gets to have a glimpse of the excitement of the then young parents at his arrival into this world. that's what i try to paint onto the canvas of my lens.
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