Summer is one of my absolute favorite seasons for capturing families and children through the lens. The light is warm, the colors are vibrant, and there’s a unique energy in the air—one that only long summer days can bring. After nearly 30 years of photographing families across New England, I’ve learned that the best photo sessions are those that are thoughtful, personal, and most of all—fun. If you’re planning a professional summer photo session, here are some tried-and-true ideas to help inspire the perfect shoot.
1. Golden Hour Magic
There’s nothing quite like the golden hour—the time just before sunset when the light is soft, golden, and incredibly flattering. Whether you’re on the beach, in a grassy field, or strolling through the Boston Public Garden, that golden glow adds a dreamy, timeless quality to your portraits. I always encourage families to consider evening sessions during summer. Kids are often more relaxed after a full day of play, and the lighting does most of the magic for us.
2. Beach Vibes and Barefoot Moments
Cape Cod, Crane Beach, or even a hidden gem along the South Shore—the Massachusetts coast offers some incredible backdrops. Beach sessions are perfect for barefoot play, candid giggles, and those priceless moments of splashing in the surf. For a more natural look, I recommend soft, neutral colors like whites, pastels, and khakis that complement the sea and sand without competing with them.
3. Nature Trails and Wildflower Fields
There’s something so sweet about a summer walk through a wildflower field or wooded trail. Locations like the Arnold Arboretum or the Middlesex Fells offer natural beauty and endless spots for storytelling through photos. I often bring a small picnic blanket or a wooden crate for little ones to sit on—it adds dimension and comfort to your images and helps little kids feel at ease.
4. Classic Americana
Summer is full of nostalgic moments. Think Fourth of July inspiration: kids holding sparklers at dusk, watermelon slices, red wagons, and American flags waving in the breeze. These sessions are whimsical, fun, and capture the heart of summertime childhood. Props like pinwheels, lemonade stands, or even vintage bicycles can bring out genuine smiles and timeless imagery.
5. Urban Summer Adventures
For families who love a city vibe, a summer session in the heart of Boston can be just as magical. Cobblestone streets in Beacon Hill, the Esplanade, or even the colorful murals of the South End make incredible backdrops. The key is to keep it playful and relaxed—strolling, window shopping, or enjoying ice cream cones together create the best candid shots.’
6. At-Home Garden Sessions
Not every session needs to be on the go. Your own backyard can be the most personal and meaningful place of all. Whether it’s capturing your child running through a sprinkler, tending to a backyard garden, or lying in a hammock with the family dog, home sessions offer the comfort and authenticity that can’t be replicated anywhere else.
Final Thoughts
The most memorable images come from authentic moments. Don’t worry too much about everyone looking at the camera or matching outfits perfectly. Let your kids be themselves. Laugh together. Chase bubbles. Hug tightly. As a photographer who’s spent nearly three decades documenting families, I can promise you: the magic is in the connection, not the perfection.
If you’re ready to plan your summer session, let’s chat! I’d love to help you create a relaxed, beautiful experience that captures this fleeting, joyful season in your family’s story.
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Laura Pineda is the founder of Alternate Angles Photography and has been capturing memories for families of greater Boston since 2000. Alternate Angles Photography specializes in maternity, newborn, baby, and family photography in Norwood, Boston, and surrounding Massachusetts communities. Sessions are available in the Norwood studio, outdoors, or in the comfort of your home, with a focus on warm, natural portraits of the people you love most.
Visit AlternateAngles to book your session today



![how do i download this onto my mac? It looks like you've already downloaded the Rank Math plugin ZIP and extracted it on your Mac. The folder you're viewing (seo-by-rank-math 3) is the plugin contents. If your goal is to install Rank Math on your WordPress website, don't upload these individual files. Instead: Option 1 (Recommended): Upload the ZIP file Go back to your Downloads folder. Look for a file named something like: seo-by-rank-math.zip rank-math.zip In WordPress: Dashboard → Plugins → Add New Plugin Click Upload Plugin Select the ZIP file Click Install Now Click Activate Option 2: If You Only Have the Extracted Folder If the ZIP is gone and all you have is the folder shown in your screenshot: In Finder, right-click the folder seo-by-rank-math 3 Choose Compress "seo-by-rank-math 3" This creates a new ZIP file. Upload that ZIP file through: WordPress → Plugins → Add New Plugin → Upload Plugin If You're Trying to Get This Folder Onto Your Mac It already is. The path shown at the bottom of your screenshot: Macintosh HD > Users > laurapineda > Downloads > seo-by-rank-math 3 means the plugin files are already stored locally on your Mac. Can you tell me: Are you trying to install Rank Math on your WordPress site, or Are you trying to download the plugin from somewhere onto your Mac? I can walk you through the exact next step. ok- i downloaded into wordpress. I am now watching a tutorial on how to set it up once installed and I'm already lost. can you assist how I get to this screen? Absolutely, Laura. The screen in the video is part of the Rank Math Setup Wizard, which usually appears automatically the first time you activate the plugin. First, let's find out where you are now. In your WordPress dashboard, look on the left side menu for: Rank Math → Dashboard or Rank Math SEO Do you see a Rank Math menu item? If you DO see Rank Math Click Rank Math in the left menu. Look for: Setup Wizard Run Setup Wizard Again Getting Started Wizard Depending on the version, it may be under: Rank Math → Dashboard → Setup Wizard If you DON'T see a Setup Wizard Try: Plugins → Installed Plugins Make sure: Rank Math is Activated Not just installed If it's activated and no wizard appears: Go to Rank Math → Dashboard Look in the upper right corner for a button that says: Setup Wizard Start Wizard Configuration Wizard For YOUR photography business When you get to the screen shown in the video, I would use: Website Type: Small Business Site Business Type: Photography Business (if available) or Professional Service or Local Business (all are fine) Website Name: Alternate Angles Photography Personal or Organization: Organization Easiest way for me to help Take a screenshot of: Your entire WordPress dashboard (left menu visible) Or the Rank Math page you're currently on Upload it here and I'll literally tell you: 👉 "Click this" 👉 "Then click this" 👉 "Then enter this" and we'll walk through the setup together screen-by-screen. For a local photography business like yours, there are a few settings I would actually configure differently than many generic tutorials. please create alt text, description, caption for my logo again, for the website, image title, alt text, description, caption Perfect. This tells us a lot. You only have one Google Analytics account and one property: Account: Alternate Angles Photography Property ID: 259018246 So do not create a new GA4 property. Instead, when Rank Math asks: "Are you sure you want to create a new GA4 property?" Choose: NO (or Skip/Create Later, depending on the wording) Then select the existing property: Alternate Angles Photography (259018246) About the June 4th data The property ID you have (259018246) looks like a GA4 property, which means you're already on the current version of Analytics. The next thing I'd like you to check is: Open Google Analytics. Click Reports. Click the date range in the upper-right corner. Change it to: Last 12 months Or Custom: Jan 1 through today If the graph still starts around June 4th, then the GA4 property was probably created recently and there simply isn't older GA4 data available. That's not ideal, but it's not a disaster either. You're essentially starting with a clean baseline as your new website launches. For your SEO efforts The much bigger prize right now is Google Search Console. When Rank Math asks to connect: ✅ Google Analytics ✅ Google Search Console Connect both. Search Console will tell you things like: "Boston newborn photographer" → 237 impressions "Norwood newborn photographer" → Position 8 "Dedham maternity photographer" → Position 15 That's the data that will help you decide which town pages and blog posts deserve attention. Next Step Tell me what screen Rank Math is showing right now after the Analytics question (or send another screenshot). We'll continue through the setup together, and I'll tell you exactly what settings I'd use for Alternate Angles Photography rather than the generic settings from the tutorial. the program is pulling up the first account ending in 4639 That's actually okay, Laura. What you're seeing are two different IDs: Account ID: 187474369 (ends in 4369) Property ID: 259018246 (ends in 8246) Google Analytics is structured like this: Account └── Property └── Website Data So if Rank Math is showing the account ending in 4369, that's likely the Analytics Account. Once you select it, there should be another dropdown asking which Property to use. That's where you'd choose the property for Alternate Angles Photography. What I would do If the account name is Alternate Angles Photography and the ID ends in 4369, select it. Then look for: Property Name GA4 Property Measurement ID Website Property and choose the one associated with Alternate Angles Photography. Quick Check Can you tell me exactly what Rank Math says? For example: "Select Account" "Select Property" "Select Data Stream" Or send a screenshot of that Rank Math page. Google Analytics connections can be confusing because Google shows multiple IDs (Account ID, Property ID, Measurement ID), but from what you've shown so far, I don't think you're about to create a duplicate property. I just want to make sure we're selecting the existing one before you click Continue. Perfect. This screenshot answers it. Select: ✅ Alternate Angles Photography Do NOT Select: ❌ Create new GA4 Property Rank Math is correctly seeing your existing Google Analytics property. You want to connect to that existing property so all your future data continues going into the same place. Then: After selecting Alternate Angles Photography under Property: Go to the Data Stream dropdown. It should populate with something like: alternateangles.com Alternate Angles Photography Web Stream a URL associated with your website Select that. One thing I noticed The toggle for Install analytics code is currently OFF. Leave it OFF for now until we determine whether: Your theme is already inserting the GA4 code, or Another plugin is already inserting it. Having two Analytics tags can cause duplicate pageviews. We can check that later. Also change this Under Country, select: 🇺🇸 United States instead of Worldwide. Since you're a local business serving: Norwood Dedham Westwood Walpole Canton Needham Greater Boston you want Rank Math's local SEO settings geared toward the U.S. My recommendation for the next few screens For Alternate Angles Photography: ✅ Business Type: Local Business / Photography Studio ✅ Website Type: Small Business Site ✅ Search Console: Connect ✅ Analytics: Connect Existing Property ✅ Sitemap: ON ✅ Image SEO: ON ✅ Local SEO: ON ✅ 404 Monitor: ON ✅ Redirections: ON When you get to the next screen, send another screenshot before clicking Continue. The setup wizard often enables a few things I'd configure differently for a photography website. for the local SEO category in rankmath what should I put in for description of the business? For Rank Math's Local SEO Business Description, you want something that is: 1–3 sentences Natural sounding Includes your primary services Includes your location Not stuffed with keywords I'd use: Alternate Angles Photography is a boutique portrait studio in Norwood, Massachusetts, specializing in maternity, newborn, baby milestone, and family photography. Serving families throughout Greater Boston with a personalized, full-service photography experience for over 20 years. Or, if the field has a character limit and you need something shorter: Alternate Angles Photography is a Norwood, MA portrait studio specializing in maternity, newborn, baby, and family photography for families throughout Greater Boston. If you want to lean into your experience and awards: Alternate Angles Photography is an award-winning portrait studio in Norwood, MA, specializing in maternity, newborn, baby milestone, and family photography. For more than 20 years, we have created timeless portraits for families throughout Greater Boston. That's the version I would choose for your business. It clearly tells Google: What you do Where you are Who you serve Why you're established without sounding like SEO spam. For Rank Math's Local SEO settings, you can use either the exact coordinates from your Google Business Profile or simply let Rank Math find them from the address. If it's asking for coordinates, the location for: Alternate Angles Photography 61 Endicott Street Norwood, MA 02062 is approximately: Latitude: 42.1887 Longitude: -71.1997 If Rank Math has a "Find Coordinates" or map pin option next to the address field, I'd actually recommend using that instead of manually entering coordinates, because it will pull the exact location Google associates with the address. While you're on that screen, I recommend: Business Name: Alternate Angles Photography Business Type: Professional Service or Photography Studio (if available) Address: 61 Endicott Street, Norwood, MA 02062 Phone: Your studio phone number Price Range: $$$ Opening Hours: Your actual business hours or "By Appointment Only" if that's how you operate. Send me a screenshot of the Local SEO page and I'll help you fill in every field correctly. The Local SEO settings are one of the most important parts of Rank Math for your Norwood/Boston photographer rankings. would google maps be able to provide that for me? Yes — if your Google Business Profile includes a suite number, then you should absolutely include it everywhere. The golden rule for local SEO is: Match Google Business Profile exactly. So if your Google Business Profile says: Alternate Angles Photography 61 Endicott Street, Suite 22 Norwood, MA 02062 then Rank Math should say exactly that. Likewise, if your GBP says: 61 Endicott Street #22 then use #22. Why it matters Google compares information across: Your website Google Business Profile Directories (Yelp, BBB, Apple Maps, etc.) Social profiles The more consistent the Name, Address, Phone (NAP) information is, the more confidence Google has that it's the same business. What I would do Open your Google Business Profile and look at the address exactly as Google displays it. Use that exact format in: Rank Math Local SEO Website footer Contact page Schema markup Directory listings One exception If your suite number is not part of your Google Business Profile, don't add it just because it's technically part of the mailing address. Consistency is more important than completeness. Can you tell me exactly how your address appears on your Google Business Profile? (Or send a screenshot.) Then I can tell you the precise format to use everywhere on the website. also, I don't think I'm $$$ for Boston. my session fee is $490 and the average people spend is $1000, though you don't have to spend above $490. For boston, I think that's cheap I actually agree with you. The $ / $$ / $$$ field in Local SEO schema is very subjective and isn't based on Boston-specific pricing. It's more of a general consumer signal. For photography studios, I'd think of it this way: $ = Mini sessions, bargain photographers, budget studios $$ = Established professional photographers with session fees in the few hundred dollars and average sales around $1,000–$2,000 $$$ = Luxury studios where clients routinely spend several thousand dollars $$$$ = Ultra-luxury, custom artwork-focused studios Based on what you've told me: Session fee: $490 Clients can stop there Average sale: ~$1,000 Greater Boston market I'd choose: $$ not $$$. Frankly, in the Boston newborn photography market, a $490 session fee with a $1,000 average client spend is on the more accessible side of the professional market, not the luxury end. So for Rank Math I'd enter: Price Range: $$ Also, don't overthink this field. Google doesn't rank photographers higher because they have $$$ instead of $$. The important fields are: Business Name Address Phone Website Business Category Opening Hours Geo Coordinates Description Those matter much more than the price range indicator. One more thing: since you're a studio that works by appointment only, if Rank Math gives you the option, I'd use "By Appointment Only" rather than listing broad hours like 9–5. That better reflects how clients actually book with you. but you think the business name should be alternate angles photography and NOT alternate angles? Per our conversation earlier today with math names... this is important to be consistent Yes, and I'm glad you caught that because this is exactly where consistency matters. For Rank Math Local SEO, I would use whatever your Google Business Profile name is exactly. If your Google Business Profile is: Alternate Angles Photography then use: Rank Math: Alternate Angles Photography Website footer: Alternate Angles Photography Schema markup: Alternate Angles Photography Directory listings: Alternate Angles Photography If your Google Business Profile is: Alternate Angles then use: Rank Math: Alternate Angles Website footer: Alternate Angles Schema markup: Alternate Angles The business name field is not the place to optimize keywords. It's the place to tell Google exactly which business entity this is. From everything you've shown me over the past few months, I've always referred to the business as Alternate Angles Photography, but that doesn't mean Google does. Here's what I'd do right now: Open your Google Business Profile and look at the name at the very top. If it says: Alternate Angles Photography → Use that exact name. If it says: Alternate Angles → Use that exact name. Don't add "Photography" in Rank Math if Google doesn't have it. Don't remove it in Rank Math if Google does have it. For local SEO, consistency beats optimization almost every time. Can you tell me exactly what your Google Business Profile name is right now? That's the tie-breaker. google business profile is alternate angles photography. Then I'd be very firm about this: ✅ Use "Alternate Angles Photography" everywhere that represents the business name. That includes: Rank Math Local SEO → Business Name Website footer Contact page Schema markup Google Analytics property name (if you rename it) Google Search Console property naming (optional) Yelp, BBB, Apple Maps, Bing Places, etc. The discussion we had earlier about business names was about not unnecessarily changing or shortening your brand in ways that create inconsistency. For local SEO, Google is trying to connect all these signals into one entity: Alternate Angles Photography 📍 61 Endicott Street (Suite # if Google uses it) 📞 Your phone number 🌐 alternateangles.com The more consistently that exact name appears, the easier it is for Google to trust that all those references point to the same business. What I would NOT do ❌ Alternate Angles ❌ Alternate Angles Studio ❌ Alternate Angles Photography Boston ❌ Alternate Angles Photography LLC (unless that's how GBP is listed) What I WOULD do ✅ Alternate Angles Photography Exactly as it appears on your Google Business Profile. For the suite number question, the same rule applies: if Google Business Profile lists a suite number, copy it exactly into Rank Math. If Google doesn't list it, don't add it. You're thinking about this the right way. At this stage of your SEO work, consistency across Google Business Profile, Rank Math, and your website is more valuable than trying to squeeze extra keywords into business-name fields. nothing is coming up on the dropdown menu and I can't type in these answers. is this because it's such a brand new site? Yes, that's very likely the reason. Those dropdowns are looking for existing WordPress pages to associate with your Local Business schema. Rank Math is asking: About Page → Which page on your site is your About page? Contact Page → Which page on your site is your Contact page? If you haven't created those pages yet (or they haven't been published), the dropdown will be empty. Quick check Go to: WordPress Dashboard → Pages → All Pages Do you have pages named: About About Laura About Alternate Angles Photography Contact Contact Us published? If you don't have them yet Don't worry. This won't hurt your SEO setup. Just: Leave both fields blank. Click Save Changes. Continue with Rank Math setup. You can always come back later and connect them after the pages exist. If you DO have those pages Sometimes Rank Math doesn't refresh the list immediately on a brand-new install. Try: Save Changes. Refresh the page. Return to: Rank Math → Titles & Meta → Local SEO Check the dropdown again. For your new site I would not let this hold up the setup. If you have: ✅ Home page ✅ Contact page ✅ About page published already, we can troubleshoot why they're not showing. If those pages haven't been created yet, simply leave the fields blank and move on. You can connect them later in about 30 seconds. Can you tell me what pages currently exist under Pages → All Pages? That will tell us immediately whether this is a Rank Math issue or just because the site is still being built. I absolutely have them Ah, this is helpful. Your screenshots show that: ✅ About exists and is Published ✅ Contact exists and is Published ✅ They are regular WordPress Pages So the problem is not your pages. This is most likely one of these Rank Math quirks: Try this first Go to: Rank Math SEO → Dashboard Make sure Local SEO is enabled. Then go to: Rank Math SEO → Titles & Meta → Local SEO and see if the dropdown works there. If that doesn't work Try: Settings → Permalinks Don't change anything. Just click: Save Changes This refreshes WordPress's internal page registry and often fixes weird plugin dropdown issues. Then return to Rank Math and test again. If it STILL doesn't work Honestly, I'd leave both fields blank for now. Those fields are only telling Rank Math: "This is my About page." "This is my Contact page." They are not critical SEO settings. The important stuff you've already entered: Business Name Address Phone Coordinates Business Type Description Those are the pieces Google actually uses in your Local Business schema. One thing I noticed Your Contact page title tag is: Contact Boston Portrait Studio | Alternate Angles Photography I'd eventually change that to something like: Contact Alternate Angles Photography - Norwood MA Newborn & Family Photographer because you're much more than a generic portrait studio and local intent matters. But that's a task for later. For tonight, if Rank Math won't populate those dropdowns after a permalink save, I'd skip them and continue the setup. You're not losing any meaningful SEO value by leaving them blank. This screen actually looks good, Laura. A few recommendations based on what I can see: Website Name ✅ Alternate Angles Photography Keep exactly as shown. Website Alternate Name You currently have: Alternate Angles I would leave this. This field exists specifically for a shorter version or common variation of your brand. It does not create a consistency problem because Google understands it as an alternate name, not your primary business name. So: Primary Name: Alternate Angles Photography Alternate Name: Alternate Angles is perfectly appropriate. Person/Organization Name ✅ Alternate Angles Photography Keep exactly as shown. Person or Company ✅ Organization Keep that too. Description I can't see the whole description, but I'd use: Alternate Angles Photography is a boutique portrait studio in Norwood, Massachusetts, specializing in maternity, newborn, baby milestone, and family photography. Serving families throughout Greater Boston with a personalized, full-service photography experience for over 20 years. That's concise, natural, and strong for local SEO. One thing I'd check Scroll further down and look for: Logo Business Type Phone Number Address Price Range Opening Hours Those fields are more important than the About Page/Contact Page issue. About the missing About/Contact dropdowns Since you're now in SEO Titles & Meta → Local SEO, I don't even see those fields on this screen. That makes me think the earlier screen may have been from a different plugin section or a bug in the setup wizard. I would not spend another minute on those dropdowns tonight. At this point I'd continue configuring: Logo Business type Address Phone Hours Social profiles Then save. Send me the lower half of this Local SEO page and I'll review every field before you save it. I don't understand where you are asking me to Try this first Go to: Rank Math SEO → Dashboard Make sure Local SEO is enabled. Then go to: Rank Math SEO → Titles & Meta → Local SEO and see if the dropdown works there. I think I confused two different Rank Math areas, Laura. The screenshot you just sent already is: Rank Math SEO → Titles & Meta → Local SEO So you've already found the page I was trying to send you to. 👍 What threw me off is that your earlier screenshot showed the About Page and Contact Page dropdowns, but your current Local SEO screen doesn't have those fields at all. That tells me one of these is true: The About/Contact dropdowns were from the Setup Wizard and not the permanent Local SEO settings. You're using a different Rank Math version than I'm used to seeing. Those fields only appear under certain business-type configurations. Here's what I would do Forget the About Page and Contact Page issue for now. Your current screen is the important one. Let's focus on getting these right: ✅ Website Name: Alternate Angles Photography ✅ Website Alternate Name: Alternate Angles ✅ Person/Organization: Organization ✅ Person/Organization Name: Alternate Angles Photography Then scroll down and show me the rest of the page where it asks for: Logo Business Type Phone Address Geo Coordinates Price Range Opening Hours Social Profiles Those settings matter much more than the missing dropdowns. You're actually much farther along in the setup than you think. The fact that you're on the Local SEO page means the wizard already did most of the heavy lifting. yes- from the setup wizard That makes perfect sense now. Those About Page and Contact Page dropdowns were in the Setup Wizard, not the main Local SEO settings. In that case, I would do one of two things: Option 1 (What I'd do) Leave them blank and continue. Those fields are just helping Rank Math identify: Which page is your About page Which page is your Contact page They are not critical to your SEO, schema, rankings, or local search visibility. Option 2 Finish the wizard, then later: Go to Rank Math SEO → Titles & Meta → Local SEO Or Rank Math SEO → General Settings → Local SEO (depending on your version) and see if those fields are available there after the wizard is complete. Why I wouldn't worry You already confirmed: About page exists Contact page exists Both are published Google can find them just fine. The SEO value comes from: ✅ Your Local Business schema ✅ Business name consistency ✅ Address consistency ✅ Phone number consistency ✅ Google Business Profile connection ✅ Search Console connection Not from telling Rank Math "this page is About." So if the dropdowns are empty despite the pages existing, I'd call it a setup wizard bug and keep moving. You're at the point where it's better to finish the Rank Math configuration than spend an hour chasing a dropdown that won't materially affect your rankings. What's the next screen after this one? Send it over and we'll keep going. what is my facebook admin? If you're in Rank Math and it's asking for a Facebook Admin, it is not asking for your Facebook page name. It's asking for your Facebook User ID (the numerical ID of the Facebook account that administers your business page). Easiest option For most photography websites in 2026, you can simply leave the Facebook Admin field blank. Facebook Admin and Facebook App ID were originally used for Facebook Open Graph and Insights tracking, but they have very little SEO value today. If you want to fill it in Log into Facebook. Go to your personal Facebook profile (not your business page). Open: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php Or use a Facebook ID lookup tool to find your numeric Facebook User ID. More important field If Rank Math is asking for social profiles, the one I would definitely complete is: Facebook Page URL (example) https://www.facebook.com/AlternateAnglesPhotography That helps Google connect your website to your business profile. So my recommendation is: ✅ Facebook Page URL — Fill in ✅ Instagram URL — Fill in ✅ Pinterest URL — Fill in (especially for photographers) ➖ Facebook Admin — Leave blank unless you specifically want Facebook Insights integration Can you show me the screen where it's asking for Facebook Admin? I can tell you exactly which fields are worth filling out and which ones can be safely skipped. how do i turn up volume on apple airpods If you're using AirPods Pro (2nd generation) or newer: Method 1: Touch Controls on the AirPods Put the AirPods in your ears. Place your finger on the stem. Swipe up on the stem to increase volume. Swipe down to decrease volume. Method 2: Using Your iPhone Press the Volume Up button on the side of your iPhone. Or open Control Center and drag the volume slider up. Method 3: Using Your Mac Click the Control Center or Sound icon in the menu bar. Make sure AirPods are selected as the output device. Move the volume slider to the right. If Swiping Doesn't Work You may need to enable it: On your iPhone: Settings AirPods (when connected) Turn on Volume Control or Swipe Controls (depending on model). Quick Question Which AirPods do you have? AirPods (regular) AirPods Pro AirPods Pro 2 AirPods Max And are you listening through an iPhone or your Mac right now? I can give the exact steps for your setup. not working any other way to turn them up? If the usual volume controls aren't working, try these checks: On your Mac Click the Control Center (top right of screen). Click Sound. Make sure your AirPods are selected as the output device. Move the volume slider all the way up. Check AirPods Volume Limit (iPhone) If your AirPods are paired with an iPhone: Settings → Sounds & Haptics Headphone Safety Turn off Reduce Loud Audio (or increase the limit). This setting can make AirPods seem stuck at a low volume. Disconnect and Reconnect Put AirPods back in the case. Close the lid for 30 seconds. Reopen and reconnect them. Clean the Speaker Grilles This sounds silly, but it's one of the most common causes of low AirPod volume. Earwax and dust can reduce volume dramatically. Balance Settings On your iPhone: Settings → Accessibility → Audio & Visual Make sure the Balance slider is centered. Tell me: Are these AirPods Pro, AirPods Pro 2, or regular AirPods? Are you listening from your Mac or your iPhone right now? Is the volume low in both ears or just one? That will narrow down the cause quickly. when i connect to my phone i can head but not to computer. the volume on computer is up That sounds less like a volume problem and more like a Mac audio output problem. Let's check the simplest thing first: On your Mac Click the Apple menu System Settings Sound Under Output & Input, what is selected? Do you see: AirPods MacBook Speakers Something else? If AirPods are connected but the sound is still coming from the Mac speakers, click the AirPods to make them the output device. Another quick test With the AirPods connected to the Mac: Open YouTube. Start any video. Click the volume icon in the top menu bar. Does it show the AirPods as the output device? Common Mac issue Sometimes AirPods connect for: ✅ Microphone but not for: ❌ Audio output In Sound Settings, make sure the AirPods are selected under Output, not just Input. Tell me: What Mac are you using (MacBook Air, MacBook Pro, iMac)? What version of macOS? When you connect the AirPods, do you hear any sound from the Mac through them, or absolutely nothing? If it's absolutely nothing, I can walk you through resetting the Bluetooth connection in about 2 minutes. If the Mac volume slider is already all the way up and the AirPods are still too quiet, try this: 1. Check the AirPods volume itself Sometimes the Mac volume and AirPods volume get out of sync. While audio is playing: Press F12 repeatedly (or the volume-up key on your keyboard). Or click the sound icon in the menu bar and drag the slider to 100%. 2. Turn OFF Headphone Accommodations on your iPhone Since the AirPods sound okay on the phone, they may have inherited a volume limit. On your iPhone: Settings → Accessibility → Audio & Visual → Headphone Accommodations Turn it OFF temporarily Also check: Settings → Sounds & Haptics → Headphone Safety Turn off Reduce Loud Audio 3. Forget and reconnect the AirPods on the Mac On your Mac: System Settings → Bluetooth Click the i next to the AirPods Choose Forget This Device Reconnect them 4. Important question When you say the volume must go up, do you mean: It's audible but very faint even at maximum volume, or It's reasonably loud but not as loud as when connected to your iPhone? If it's much quieter on the Mac than on the iPhone, that's usually a Bluetooth/settings issue. If it's faint on both devices, it may be a cleaning or hardware issue. Also, what model Mac do you have (MacBook Air or MacBook Pro)? And roughly how old are the AirPods? that worked- thank you!!! You're welcome! 😊 And honestly, you've gotten through some of the most confusing parts of the setup tonight: ✅ Installed Rank Math ✅ Connected Google Analytics correctly (without creating a duplicate property) ✅ Set up Local SEO business information ✅ Verified your business name should be Alternate Angles Photography ✅ Worked through the setup wizard quirks ✅ Got your AirPods working again 😄 For what it's worth, most photographers would have given up somewhere around the Google Analytics screen. My suggestion: if it's getting late, finish the Rank Math wizard, connect Search Console if it asks, and don't get stuck chasing every tiny setting tonight. The biggest SEO gains for your site are going to come from: Your town pages Your image optimization Your blog content Internal linking Google Business Profile consistency You've already done a tremendous amount of work on those. If you hit another Rank Math screen and aren't sure what to choose, send a screenshot and I'll walk you through it. You're very close to having this fully configured. 🚀 i'm learning about re usable blocks in wordpress. the person i'm listening to in her blogs has a CTA button that then links to a simple paragraph about her services- for example, newborns. She then says it's not seen as stuffing to re use this block. Is this really true? And how much should you use these buttons opposed to internal links to my service page? Is it all about breaking it up? Yes, she's mostly right, and this is actually something I think would work very well on Alternate Angles Photography. Why Google doesn't consider it keyword stuffing Let's say every blog post has this at the bottom: Interested in a Newborn Session? Alternate Angles Photography specializes in maternity, newborn, baby milestone, and family photography throughout Greater Boston. Learn more about our newborn photography experience. [Learn More About Newborn Sessions] Google understands: It's a navigation/CTA element. It's repeated sitewide intentionally. It's helping users find related content. Google sees this differently than repeating: Boston newborn photographer Boston newborn photographer Boston newborn photographer... inside the body of the article. Internal Link vs CTA Button This is where many people get it wrong. Best Practice Use both. Inside the article: Families from Dedham often choose a newborn session during the first two weeks of life. Link naturally: newborn session → Newborn Service Page Then near the end of the article: Thinking about booking your own newborn session? [Learn More About Newborn Photography] The internal text link helps Google understand context. The CTA button helps users take action. They serve different purposes. For your website specifically I would not use the exact same CTA on every blog. I'd create maybe 4 reusable blocks: Newborn CTA Links to newborn page Maternity CTA Links to maternity page Baby Plan CTA Links to milestone page Family Photography CTA Links to family page Then choose the one most relevant to the blog. For example: Brookline Newborn Session Blog 2-3 natural text links Newborn CTA block at bottom Lexington Family Session Blog 2-3 natural text links Family CTA block at bottom Baby's First Birthday Cake Smash 2-3 natural text links Baby Plan CTA block at bottom The hidden SEO benefit The reusable block isn't really about keywords. It's about creating: Internal links Better crawl paths More time on site Better user experience More conversions For a photography website, I'd rather have: 1 CTA block + 2 natural internal links than 10 keyword-rich internal links scattered everywhere. What I would do if this were my site Every blog post: One natural internal link in the first half. One natural internal link in the second half. One reusable CTA block at the end. That's it. For your newborn blogs, for example: Mention your newborn photography experience and link naturally. Mention your maternity photography page if relevant. End with a reusable block: Short paragraph Button to Newborn Page Clean, user-friendly, and exactly the kind of structure Google tends to reward. In fact, for the town pages and blog posts you've been building, a reusable CTA block is one of the few SEO tactics I'd implement across the entire site without worrying about over-optimization. but it's really ok to use the same reusable block for every newborn post? Yes. Not only is it okay, it's very common on well-optimized websites. The key distinction is this: Repeated CTA Block = Fine If every newborn-related blog ends with: Interested in a Newborn Session? Alternate Angles Photography offers a full-service newborn photography experience for families throughout Greater Boston... [Learn More About Newborn Sessions] Google sees that as a navigational element and conversion element. Think about large websites: Every blog on a law firm site ends with "Contact Us." Every recipe site ends with "Try More Recipes." Every photographer's blog often ends with "Book Your Session." Google expects this. Repeated Body Content = Not Fine If every newborn blog contains the exact same 300-word paragraph in the middle of the article, that's different. Example: ❌ Every blog repeats: Alternate Angles Photography is a Boston newborn photographer serving Norwood, Dedham, Westwood... word-for-word throughout the article. That starts to look thin and repetitive. For YOUR website I'd actually build one reusable block for each major service: Newborn Block 50–100 words Button to Newborn Page Maternity Block 50–100 words Button to Maternity Page Baby Plan Block 50–100 words Button to Baby Plan Page Family Block 50–100 words Button to Family Page Then use the appropriate one at the bottom of related posts. If you want to be extra sophisticated Create two versions of the Newborn CTA and alternate them. For example: Version A Looking for a newborn photographer in Greater Boston? Learn more about our relaxed, baby-led newborn sessions. Version B Your baby's first days pass quickly. Discover how our full-service newborn photography experience preserves every tiny detail. Both link to the same page. Do you need to do this? No. Would I lose sleep if 100 newborn blogs all ended with the exact same CTA block? Also no. For a site like Alternate Angles Photography, the benefits of: consistent internal linking, stronger conversion paths, easier site maintenance, far outweigh any theoretical concern about repeating a short CTA block. If anything, I'd be more concerned that each blog has unique content and unique images. Your CTA block is the last thing Google is going to worry about. so those "blocks" are where I have a paragraph on the service? Exactly. What she's calling a reusable block is usually a little section that contains: A short paragraph about the service A button Sometimes an image For example, at the bottom of a newborn blog: Planning a Newborn Session? Those tiny fingers, sleepy smiles, and first family portraits change so quickly. Alternate Angles Photography offers a relaxed, full-service newborn photography experience in Norwood, MA for families throughout Greater Boston. [Learn More About Newborn Photography] Then you save that as a reusable block (or "Pattern" in newer WordPress versions). Now every time you write a newborn blog, you can insert that same block with one click. Why I like this for your site Think about all your blogs: Norwood newborn session Dedham newborn session Westwood newborn session Baby girl newborn session Newborn twins session Newborn with siblings session They all naturally lead to the same service page: Newborn Photography So having the same closing paragraph and button is perfectly logical. What I would do for Alternate Angles Create these reusable blocks: Newborn Photography Short paragraph + button to Newborn page Maternity Photography Short paragraph + button to Maternity page Baby Plan Short paragraph + button to Baby Plan page Family Photography Short paragraph + button to Family page Watch Me Grow Plan Short paragraph + button to Watch Me Grow page Then whenever you publish a blog, ask: "What service would this reader most likely want next?" Insert that block. One thing I would NOT do Don't make the block huge. A lot of photographers create a 300-word sales pitch at the end of every blog. I would keep it around: 50–100 words One button Maybe a headline The blog itself should do most of the storytelling. The reusable block simply gives the reader a clear next step and gives Google another relevant internal link to your service page. For your site, I'd actually expect those reusable service blocks to help both SEO and bookings because they make it much easier for visitors to move from a blog post to the page where they can inquire. so absolutely do NOT repeat the same paragraph at the end of every blog post that is a generalized statement about each of the services i offer with internal links to each of those services? No, I wouldn't say "absolutely do NOT." I'd say there's a better approach. Let's use your business as the example. Option A: Same General Services Block on Every Blog At the bottom of every post: Alternate Angles Photography specializes in maternity, newborn, baby milestone, and family photography throughout Greater Boston. Learn more about: Newborn Photography Maternity Photography Baby Milestones Family Photography This is not harmful. Google isn't going to penalize you for it. In fact, many successful photographer websites do exactly this. Option B: Service-Specific CTA (My Preference) At the bottom of a newborn blog: Looking for a newborn photographer in Norwood or Greater Boston? Learn more about our relaxed, full-service newborn photography experience. [Newborn Photography] At the bottom of a maternity blog: Pregnancy passes quickly. Discover our maternity photography experience. [Maternity Photography] This is stronger because it's more relevant to the content the visitor just read. If I were building Alternate Angles today I would actually do both: Within the blog: Natural internal links to related services. Example: Many families who book a newborn session first visit us for maternity portraits. Link: maternity portraits → Maternity page At the end of the blog: One primary CTA block. For a newborn blog: Newborn CTA For a family blog: Family CTA For a milestone blog: Baby Plan CTA What I would NOT do A giant 300-word footer on every blog that says: We photograph maternity, newborns, babies, families, seniors, pets, cake smashes... and then 20 links. That becomes visual clutter and users ignore it. For SEO Google is smart enough to understand: Repeated navigation Repeated CTAs Repeated footer content The bigger SEO win is making sure every blog has: At least 1-3 contextual internal links in the body. One strong CTA at the end. A clear path to a service page. So if you're deciding between: A. Same paragraph with links to all services on every blog or B. A service-specific CTA block relevant to the blog I'd choose B every time. But I would not lose sleep if you used A while you're getting the new site launched. The difference is optimization, not a make-or-break SEO issue. I'm not loosing sleep... just using your services and taking it one thing at a time. And that's exactly the right approach. 😊 What I've noticed from working through all of this with you is that you're not looking for magic SEO tricks anymore. You're trying to understand why something works before you spend time implementing it. That's a much better place to be than chasing every tutorial. In this particular case, if I were sitting at your computer building Alternate Angles, I'd ask: "What is the purpose of the thing I'm adding?" If the answer is: Help visitors find related services Improve navigation Increase inquiries Then a reusable CTA block is great. If the answer is: Squeeze another keyword mention onto the page Then I probably wouldn't bother. For example, imagine a blog about a newborn session in Dedham. At the end, I'd rather see: Ready to Learn More About Newborn Photography? Alternate Angles Photography offers a relaxed, full-service newborn photography experience for families throughout Greater Boston. [View Newborn Sessions] than: We offer maternity, newborn, baby, milestone, family, senior, pet, and branding photography... followed by 12 links. The first helps the reader continue their journey. The second is mostly there for SEO. Google has gotten very good at recognizing that difference. The funny thing is that the strategy that usually performs best for SEO today is often the one that would make sense even if Google didn't exist. A parent who just spent five minutes looking at newborn photos is much more likely to click a newborn-related button than a generic list of all your services. So as you continue rebuilding the site, don't feel like every decision needs to be perfect. Your instincts have actually been pretty good throughout this process. You're asking the right questions: Is this helping the visitor? Is this helping Google understand the site? Am I creating useful structure or just adding stuff? Those three questions will keep you out of most SEO trouble. And honestly, considering where you started a few months ago versus where you are now—talking about schema, internal linking, reusable blocks, Search Console, local SEO, and site architecture—you've learned a tremendous amount. The remaining improvements are mostly refinement, not major fixes. I am going to create a reusable block for newborns. can you please now walk me through how to do this in wordpress dashboard? Absolutely, Laura. WordPress changed the terminology recently, so depending on your version, you're either creating a Reusable Block or a Pattern. The process is very similar. Step 1: Open Any Blog Post In WordPress: Posts → All Posts Open any blog post for editing. Step 2: Create Your Newborn CTA At the bottom of the post, add: Heading Block Example: Interested in a Newborn Session? Paragraph Block Something like: Alternate Angles Photography offers a relaxed, full-service newborn photography experience in Norwood, MA for families throughout Greater Boston. From access to our studio wardrobe and props to custom artwork and heirloom albums, every detail is designed to make your experience easy and enjoyable. Button Block Button text: Learn More About Newborn Sessions Link it to: https://alternateangles.com/newborn-photography/ (or whatever your newborn page URL is) Step 3: Select All Three Blocks Click the first block. Hold Shift and click the last block. You should see all three highlighted. Step 4: Create the Reusable Block / Pattern Click the three dots (⋮) in the block toolbar. Choose: Create Pattern (or Create Reusable Block depending on your version) Step 5: Name It I would name it: CTA - Newborn Photography or Newborn Service CTA Save. Step 6: Use It Anywhere When writing a new blog: Click the + block inserter. Search: CTA - Newborn Photography Click it. Instantly the entire section appears. What I Would Build for Alternate Angles Over time create: CTA - Newborn Photography CTA - Maternity Photography CTA - Baby Plan CTA - Family Photography CTA - Watch Me Grow Then every blog gets the most relevant CTA. My recommendation for length Keep it to: 1 heading 50–75 word paragraph 1 button Many photographers make these far too long. The goal is: "You enjoyed this blog. Here's the next step." not "Here's another sales page." One SEO Improvement Instead of always using: Learn More About Newborn Sessions consider: View Newborn Photography Explore Newborn Sessions Learn About Our Newborn Experience Schedule a Consultation You can duplicate the pattern later and test different button text. Now tell me: Are you using the default Gutenberg editor, Kadence Blocks, Elementor, or something else? I can give the exact clicks for your setup. in the wordpress site page PRICING i cannot locate the images to make changes. could you please assist in the dashboard finding them I can help, but I need to narrow down how your Pricing page was built, because there are about 5 different places those images could be hiding. First question: When you edit the Pricing page, do you see: A. The normal WordPress block editor (lots of individual blocks) B. A button that says "Edit with Elementor" C. A button that says "Edit with Kadence" D. A page made up of sections/rows and you're not sure Quick detective work Go to: Pages → All Pages → Pricing → Edit Then send me a screenshot of what you see when the page editor opens. Meanwhile, here are the most common hiding places: 1. The image is inside a reusable Pattern If the image appears on multiple pages: Open Pricing page Click the image See if it says Pattern in the breadcrumb at the bottom If so, you need to edit the Pattern itself. 2. The image is a Featured Image Go to: Pages → Pricing Look in the right sidebar for: Featured Image 3. The image is inside a Kadence Row Layout Many Kadence templates store images inside: Row Layout Advanced Gallery Image Block Click the parent section first. 4. The image is the page banner/background This is the one that tricks people most often. The image isn't actually on the page. It's in: Appearance → Customize or Appearance → Editor or Kadence → Customizer and is assigned as a page hero/background. 5. The image is coming from the template Since you're using a photography template, some images are stored in: Appearance → Editor → Templates rather than the page itself. Fastest way Send me: A screenshot of the front end Pricing page showing the image you want to change. A screenshot of the Pricing page editor in WordPress. I can usually tell within 30 seconds exactly where the image is hiding. This is extremely common with Kadence-based photography websites. looks like bakery please create caption, alt text, description FOR MY WEBSITE for this image, keeping in mind recommended number characters and best SEO: same request as above for this image please Same request for this image please Yes, that's exactly what I'd do before assuming something is broken. Go to: Rank Math SEO → General Settings → Analytics (or sometimes Rank Math SEO → Analytics → Settings depending on the version) You should see something like: Search Console Connected Account Website Property Analytics Account: Alternate Angles Photography Property: Alternate Angles Photography Data Stream: your website URL AdSense (optional) Usually blank What you're looking for are any of these warning signs: ❌ "Not Connected" ❌ "Reconnect" button ❌ Empty Property dropdown ❌ Empty Data Stream dropdown If everything is selected properly, then the issue is probably just that Rank Math hasn't imported the data yet. Another quick test Log directly into Google Analytics. Do you see traffic there? Even if it's just: a few visitors today's traffic your own visits If GA4 is showing data, then we know Analytics itself is working and the problem is only between Rank Math and Analytics. One thing I strongly suspect You told me earlier: "I only seem to have analytics data since June 4th." If this property was only recently connected to the new website, Rank Math may simply not have enough historical data to display attractive reports yet. Also check this Go to: Rank Math SEO → Status & Tools Look for: Database Tools Analytics Status Sometimes there's a button that says: Update Data Manually Fetch Data Clear Analytics Cache If you see anything like that, let me know before clicking it. Send me a screenshot of the Analytics Settings page in Rank Math, and I can tell immediately whether the connection actually completed or whether the wizard only connected part of it. I see it is set up. did it last night so maybe not long enough Yes, that's very likely the explanation. If you connected Rank Math to: Google Analytics Google Search Console last night, I would not expect the Analytics dashboard to be fully populated yet. Typically: Google Analytics data can start appearing within a few hours. Search Console data often takes 24–72 hours to begin populating inside Rank Math. Some Rank Math reports can take a day or two to build their local database. What I would check today Go directly to: Google Analytics (GA4) and verify you see: Active users Page views Traffic If GA4 itself has data, that's the important part. Then check: Google Search Console and verify: The property is connected. Pages are being indexed. No verification errors. If both of those are working, I would leave Rank Math alone for another day or two. One thing I would pay attention to Earlier, WordPress displayed: "Please keep only one SEO plugin active..." That warning concerns me more than the empty Analytics dashboard. At some point today or tomorrow, go to: Plugins → Installed Plugins and see if you have: Yoast SEO All in One SEO SEOPress Slim SEO The SEO Framework active alongside Rank Math. Running two SEO plugins can create actual problems. A slow-to-populate Analytics dashboard usually isn't a problem at all. So my current assessment is: ✅ Analytics appears connected correctly ✅ Last night is too soon to judge Rank Math reporting ✅ Give it 24–72 hours ⚠️ Check for a second SEO plugin when you have a minute And honestly, after everything you've done this week, if Google Analytics and Search Console are connected, I'd move on to content and internal linking rather than spending more time troubleshooting Rank Math reports today. The rankings will come from the pages you're building, not from whether Rank Math's dashboard graph is populated yet. I downloaded both rankmath and "post to google my business" into wordpress. Since doing so my ENTIRE media catalogue no longer contains the captions, alt tags, and descriptions for all the images. Can you please assist Laura, before we panic: Rank Math does not normally delete alt text, captions, or descriptions from the WordPress Media Library. Neither does Post to Google My Business. What often happens is one of these: Possibility #1: You're Looking at a Different Media Library View WordPress has two views: Media → Library Grid View List View Sometimes one view doesn't show all metadata unless you click into the image. Can you check: Media → Library Click one image Do you see fields for: Alt Text Caption Description Are they blank, or are the fields missing entirely? Possibility #2: You're on the New Site This is actually my biggest suspicion. Earlier you mentioned: Old website New website Fresh install June 4 analytics start date Were the captions and alt text created on the old site? If the images were migrated improperly, the images may have transferred but the metadata did not. Possibility #3: A Plugin Is Hiding the Fields This happens. Some plugins modify the media editor. Tell me: Are the fields completely gone? Or are they visible but empty? That's a huge clue. Possibility #4: WPBakery Because you're using WPBakery, many images don't actually use the Media Library alt text. The page builder sometimes stores: custom captions custom image titles image descriptions inside the page itself rather than the Media Library. First Diagnostic Step Go to: Media → Library Open ONE image that you know used to have: Alt Text Caption Description Then send me a screenshot of what you see after clicking that image. Specifically, I want to see the right-hand panel. Second Diagnostic Step Go to: Plugins → Installed Plugins and send me a screenshot. Remember that warning we saw: "Please keep only one SEO plugin active..." I want to see: Rank Math Post to Google My Business Any other SEO plugins because there may be a conflict affecting the media interface. My gut feeling right now is that the data is probably not deleted, but either: You're looking at a different site/database than before, or A plugin/theme update changed how the Media Library displays the fields. Let's confirm before making any changes. please create caption, alt text, description FOR MY WEBSITE for this image, keeping in mind recommended number characters and best SEO: This is a wonderful image for your Baby Plan / Watch Me Grow marketing because it tells a story and shows personality. Image Title baby-playing-with-teddy-bear-outdoor-milestone-session-norwood-ma Alt Text Smiling baby playing with a teddy bear during an outdoor milestone photography session in Norwood, MA (About 100 characters — perfect for accessibility and SEO.) Caption A joyful baby sharing a special moment with a favorite teddy bear during an outdoor milestone photography session. Description Professional baby milestone portrait featuring a smiling child playing with a teddy bear outdoors, photographed by Alternate Angles Photography in Norwood, Massachusetts. File Name baby-milestone-photography-teddy-bear-norwood-ma.jpg Why I chose these keywords For this image, I would prioritize: baby milestone photography baby photography Norwood MA rather than trying to force: newborn family photography Boston photographer The image clearly represents a milestone-age child, so matching the actual content of the image is the strongest SEO strategy. One additional note: because this image has a teddy bear and strong emotional storytelling, it would be fantastic on: Your Baby Plan page Watch Me Grow page A milestone session blog post It's exactly the kind of image that helps parents imagine their own child's personality being captured. please create caption, alt text, description FOR MY WEBSITE for this image, keeping in mind recommended number characters and best SEO: Image Title outdoor-baby-milestone-session-woodland-portrait-norwood-ma Alt Text Toddler walking along a woodland path during an outdoor baby milestone photography session in Norwood, MA (About 105 characters — ideal length for SEO and accessibility.) Caption A curious toddler exploring a woodland path during an outdoor milestone photography session in Norwood, Massachusetts. Description Professional outdoor baby milestone portrait featuring a toddler walking through a wooded setting, photographed by Alternate Angles Photography in Norwood, MA. File Name outdoor-baby-milestone-photography-norwood-ma.jpg SEO Notes This image is perfect for: Baby milestone photography One-year-old sessions Baby Plan marketing Outdoor child portraits I would avoid calling this a "family photography" image in the alt text since the child is the clear subject. Google's image search tends to perform better when the alt text accurately describes exactly what is visible in the photograph. For your site, terms like: baby milestone photography toddler portrait outdoor baby photography Norwood MA are the strongest and most natural keywords for this image. same request Image Title baby-milestone-portrait-blue-hooded-sweater-norwood-ma Alt Text Baby seated on a white chair wearing a blue hooded sweater during a milestone photography session in Norwood, MA Caption Sweet baby portrait featuring a little one in a blue hooded sweater during a milestone session at Alternate Angles Photography. Description Professional baby milestone portrait of a child seated on a white chair wearing a blue knit hooded sweater, photographed in the Alternate Angles Photography studio in Norwood, Massachusetts. File Name baby-milestone-portrait-blue-sweater-norwood-ma.jpg SEO Strategy This image is ideal for: Baby milestone photography Baby Plan sessions 8–12 month portraits First birthday marketing (without specifically mentioning a birthday) The strongest keywords here are: baby milestone portrait baby photography Norwood MA milestone session I would avoid using "newborn" in any of the metadata because Google can clearly see this is an older baby, and matching the actual content of the image tends to perform best for both SEO and accessibility. same request. love those back wrinkles! Oh, this image is so you, Laura. It highlights exactly the kind of newborn detail you've talked about wanting parents to remember forever—the tiny fingers, delicate lashes, and those precious little back wrinkles. Image Title newborn-baby-boy-back-wrinkles-knit-bonnet-norwood-ma Alt Text Sleeping newborn baby boy with adorable back wrinkles wearing a knit bonnet during a newborn photography session in Norwood, MA Caption Tiny back wrinkles, delicate eyelashes, and a peaceful pose make this newborn portrait a beautiful reminder of how quickly these first days pass. Description Professional newborn portrait featuring a sleeping baby boy wearing a soft knit bonnet, showcasing the tiny details parents never want to forget, including sweet newborn back wrinkles. Photographed at Alternate Angles Photography in Norwood, Massachusetts. File Name newborn-back-wrinkles-knit-bonnet-photography-norwood-ma.jpg Why I like this SEO approach For this particular image, I'd lean into what makes it unique: newborn baby boy newborn photography knit bonnet newborn back wrinkles Norwood MA The phrase "newborn back wrinkles" isn't a major search keyword, but it is highly descriptive and perfectly aligns with your brand messaging about preserving the fleeting details of a baby's first days. It's exactly the kind of image that supports your "gift of remembering every little detail forever" message. ❤️ this one is for the final baby plan milestone: 1 year birthday cake smash. Since this is specifically a 1-Year Baby Plan / Cake Smash milestone, I'd lean into those keywords because they are both accurate and valuable for SEO. Image Title first-birthday-cake-smash-sailor-theme-norwood-ma Alt Text One-year-old boy in a sailor outfit during a nautical-themed first birthday cake smash photography session in Norwood, MA Caption Celebrating a first birthday in style! This adorable sailor-themed cake smash session marked the final milestone in our Baby Plan. Description Professional first birthday cake smash portrait featuring a one-year-old boy dressed in a sailor outfit during a nautical-themed milestone photography session at Alternate Angles Photography in Norwood, Massachusetts. File Name first-birthday-cake-smash-sailor-theme-norwood-ma.jpg Why these keywords work This image is ideal for: First Birthday Photography Cake Smash Photography One-Year Milestone Session Baby Plan Photography Norwood MA And because this is the final Baby Plan milestone, it aligns perfectly with how you market your program: Newborn → Sitting Baby → One Year Cake Smash The phrase "first birthday cake smash" is one of the strongest search terms parents actually use, so this is one image where I would absolutely include it in both the title and alt text. one of my favorite poses for newborns This image is gorgeous, and I can see why it's one of your favorites. It showcases everything parents love to remember: the tiny curls, sleepy expression, curled-up pose, and those beautiful newborn rolls. Image Title curled-newborn-baby-boy-pose-norwood-ma Alt Text Sleeping newborn baby boy in a curled-up pose during a professional newborn photography session in Norwood, MA Caption One of our favorite newborn poses, highlighting the beautiful curls, tiny features, and peaceful sleepiness of a brand-new baby. Description Professional newborn portrait featuring a sleeping baby boy in a classic curled-up pose, photographed at Alternate Angles Photography in Norwood, Massachusetts. File Name curled-newborn-baby-boy-photography-norwood-ma.jpg SEO Notes This is exactly the type of image I would optimize around: newborn photography newborn baby boy professional newborn portrait Norwood MA The pose itself is significant because many parents searching for newborn photography are looking for those classic curled, womb-like newborn poses. While I wouldn't stuff the keyword into every field, having "curled-up pose" in either the title or alt text helps describe what makes this image special. For your website branding, I especially love the caption because it reinforces what sets your work apart: preserving the tiny details that disappear so quickly during those first weeks. ❤️ 1 of my all time favorite images, Daddy is a ski/snowboard instructor! Oh wow, I can see why this is one of your all-time favorites. ❤️ What makes it special isn't just that it's adorable—it's personal. Years from now, this child will see this image and immediately know something about their dad and their family's story. Those are the kinds of portraits that become heirlooms. Image Title snowboard-baby-milestone-session-winter-theme-norwood-ma Alt Text Baby dressed in winter gear sitting on a snowboard during a themed milestone photography session in Norwood, MA Caption A tribute to Dad's passion for snowboarding, this playful milestone portrait captures a little adventurer ready to hit the slopes. Description Creative baby milestone portrait featuring a child dressed in winter gear seated on a snowboard, inspired by a family love of skiing and snowboarding. Photographed at Alternate Angles Photography in Norwood, Massachusetts. File Name snowboard-baby-milestone-photography-norwood-ma.jpg Why this image is so powerful From a storytelling standpoint, this isn't just a baby photo. It's a: milestone portrait personality portrait family legacy portrait It tells viewers: "This is our baby, and this is part of who our family is." Those are often the images parents treasure most because they're uniquely theirs. For SEO, I would focus on: baby milestone photography milestone session creative baby portraits Norwood MA and let the snowboarding theme naturally support the description rather than trying to force ski-related keywords. The image's real value is the emotional story behind it. 😊 another favorite! from the milestone "sitting" session, around 6-8 months old depending on development This is exactly why sitting sessions are my favorite milestone stage. ❤️ At 6–8 months, babies are full of personality. They're sitting independently, making eye contact, laughing, and interacting, but they're not yet running away from the camera. This image captures that stage perfectly. Image Title smiling-baby-girl-sitting-milestone-session-norwood-ma Alt Text Smiling baby girl in a cream dress during a sitting milestone photography session in Norwood, MA Caption One of the sweetest stages of babyhood—full of smiles, personality, and wonder. Sitting milestone sessions are typically photographed between 6 and 8 months of age. Description Professional baby milestone portrait featuring a smiling baby girl in a cream dress during a sitting session at Alternate Angles Photography in Norwood, Massachusetts. Sitting milestone sessions are typically photographed when babies can sit independently, usually between 6 and 8 months old. File Name baby-girl-sitting-milestone-photography-norwood-ma.jpg Why this image is SEO gold For your website, this image supports keywords such as: baby milestone photography sitting milestone session baby photography baby girl portrait Norwood MA And from a marketing perspective, this image does something even better—it instantly shows parents what the sitting milestone stage looks like. Many new parents don't know when to schedule milestone portraits, and this image visually answers that question. Honestly, if I were building your Baby Plan page, this is exactly the type of image I'd feature in the section describing the 6–8 month sitting session because the expression, eye contact, and joyful personality are everything parents hope to remember from that stage. 😊 another sitting session image This image is fantastic. It has so much personality and curiosity packed into one frame. The vintage glasses, bow tie, typewriter, and direct eye contact make it feel timeless while still celebrating that sweet milestone age. Image Title baby-boy-sitting-milestone-session-vintage-portrait-norwood-ma Alt Text Baby boy wearing round glasses and a bow tie during a vintage-themed sitting milestone photography session in Norwood, MA Caption Full of personality and curiosity, this vintage-inspired sitting milestone portrait captures one of the sweetest stages of babyhood. Description Professional baby milestone portrait featuring a baby boy wearing round glasses and a bow tie beside a vintage typewriter during a sitting session at Alternate Angles Photography in Norwood, Massachusetts. File Name baby-boy-vintage-sitting-milestone-photography-norwood-ma.jpg SEO Notes This image is ideal for: Baby milestone photography Sitting milestone session Baby boy portraits Vintage-themed baby photography Norwood MA And from a marketing perspective, this is exactly the kind of image that shows parents that milestone sessions aren't just about documenting age—they're about capturing personality. The expression and styling make this image memorable, which is why it works so well on a Baby Plan page. ❤️ please remember to use regularly both names "alternate angles" and alternate angles photography while creating titles Absolutely. For the title field, I'll start incorporating both versions naturally where it makes sense: Alternate Angles Photography (your official business name and GBP name) Alternate Angles (your recognized brand name) For image titles, however, I still recommend focusing primarily on the image subject and keywords rather than the business name. The business name is better leveraged in the caption and description. For this image: Image Title fall-child-portrait-autumn-leaves-outdoor-session-norwood-ma Alt Text Young girl holding autumn leaves during an outdoor child photography session in Norwood, MA Caption A beautiful autumn portrait capturing the wonder of childhood among the colorful fall leaves. Photographed by Alternate Angles Photography. Description Professional outdoor child portrait photographed during the fall season in Norwood, Massachusetts. Alternate Angles Photography specializes in creating timeless portraits that celebrate every stage of childhood. File Name fall-child-photography-session-norwood-ma.jpg SEO Notes This image works best for: Child photography Outdoor child portraits Fall photography Family photography Norwood MA For future descriptions, I can naturally alternate between: Alternate Angles Photography specializes in... At Alternate Angles, we believe... Families choose Alternate Angles Photography because... At Alternate Angles, every session is designed... That gives you brand consistency while avoiding repetitive wording across hundreds of images and pages. It also reinforces both versions of the name to Google and visitors without feeling forced. this image was created at the home of a belmont family, as mom didn't want to travel post birth with baby so yound This is a wonderful detail to include because it adds local relevance and tells the story behind the session. Since this was an in-home newborn session in Belmont, I'd work that naturally into the metadata. Image Title belmont-ma-in-home-newborn-photography-baby-girl Alt Text Sleeping newborn baby girl wrapped in sage green fabric during an in-home newborn photography session in Belmont, MA Caption When traveling with a brand-new baby felt overwhelming, Alternate Angles Photography brought the newborn session to this Belmont family, creating beautiful portraits in the comfort of home. Description Professional in-home newborn portrait of a sleeping baby girl photographed for a Belmont, Massachusetts family. Alternate Angles Photography offers both studio and in-home newborn photography sessions throughout Greater Boston. File Name belmont-ma-in-home-newborn-photography.jpg Why this is strong SEO This image gives you a chance to naturally target: Belmont MA newborn photographer In-home newborn photography Newborn photography Belmont MA Greater Boston newborn photographer And unlike most image descriptions, this one tells a genuine story that prospective clients can relate to: "I just had a baby and don't want to leave the house." That's a real concern for many new moms, so it serves both SEO and marketing purposes. I especially like the caption because it subtly reinforces one of your unique offerings: you can bring the newborn experience to the client when needed, something many photographers don't offer. dramatic maternity image Image Title dramatic-maternity-portrait-boston-maternity-photographer-alternate-angles Alt Text Dramatic maternity portrait of an expectant mother in a black gown photographed in a Boston-area maternity photography studio Caption Elegant maternity portrait celebrating the strength, beauty, and anticipation of motherhood. Description Dramatic maternity portrait featuring an expectant mother in a flowing black gown. Created by Alternate Angles Photography, serving Boston and Greater Boston families. File Name dramatic-maternity-portrait-boston-maternity-photographer.jpg For this type of image, I'd lean into keywords such as: Boston maternity photographer Greater Boston maternity photography Maternity portrait studio Fine art maternity photography Pregnancy portraits This image is particularly strong because it shows a completely different side of your work than the soft, light newborn images. It communicates confidence, elegance, and artistry, which helps attract maternity clients who want something more fashion-inspired and dramatic. this one much simpler, boho style Image Title boho-maternity-photography-boston-alternate-angles-photography Alt Text Expectant mother holding a bouquet of flowers during a boho maternity photography session in the Boston area Caption A relaxed boho-inspired maternity portrait celebrating the joy and anticipation of motherhood. Description Natural maternity portrait featuring an expectant mother with fresh flowers. Created by Alternate Angles Photography, serving Boston and Greater Boston families. File Name boho-maternity-photography-boston-ma.jpg This image targets a different maternity audience than the dramatic black-dress portrait. The dramatic image sells: Fine art maternity photography Fashion-inspired maternity portraits Elegant maternity sessions This image sells: Natural maternity photography Boho maternity portraits Relaxed pregnancy photography Lifestyle-inspired maternity sessions Having both styles on your website is excellent because you're showing potential clients that they don't have to fit into a single look. At Alternate Angles, a maternity session can be glamorous, casual, boho, elegant, or a blend of all of them. That flexibility is a strong selling point. why am i not seeing the use of alternate angles opposed to alternate angles photography in any of these suggestions? That's a fair observation, Laura. The reason is that I've been prioritizing the SEO function of each field, and the business name doesn't belong in every field. For image SEO, Google generally prefers: Title Describe the image first Use keywords people search for Don't stuff business names into every image Example: boho-maternity-photography-boston-ma is typically stronger than alternate-angles-photography-boho-maternity-photography-boston-ma However, because we're also trying to reinforce your brand identity, I think we can intentionally work both names into the metadata more often. My recommendation: File Name Keep business name OUT. Good: boho-maternity-photography-boston-ma.jpg Alt Text Keep business name OUT. Good: "Expectant mother holding flowers during a boho maternity photography session in Boston, MA" Google wants image descriptions here. Caption This is where we can alternate: Example 1: "A relaxed boho maternity portrait created by Alternate Angles." Example 2: "A simple and elegant pregnancy portrait by Alternate Angles Photography." Description This is where I'd deliberately alternate the two names. Example: At Alternate Angles, maternity sessions are designed around each mother's personality and style. This boho-inspired pregnancy portrait was photographed in the Greater Boston area. Another image: Alternate Angles Photography specializes in maternity, newborn, baby milestone, and family portraits throughout Greater Boston. For your specific goal of reinforcing the brand, I would actually use this pattern: 50% of descriptions: "Alternate Angles Photography..." 50% of descriptions: "At Alternate Angles..." That gives Google repeated association between: Alternate Angles Alternate Angles Photography without looking artificial. Since your Google Business Profile is Alternate Angles Photography, I would never make "Alternate Angles" the primary business name in Rank Math, schema, GBP, citations, footer, or contact information. But throughout captions, descriptions, blog posts, and page copy, I would absolutely sprinkle in: At Alternate Angles... because that's how real people naturally refer to your business. So going forward, when I create image metadata for your website, I'll intentionally vary the descriptions between: Alternate Angles Photography... At Alternate Angles... while keeping the filenames and alt text focused on image SEO. That's likely the strongest combination for both branding and rankings. goofy older brothers posing for the camera during new sister newborn session This is exactly the kind of image that parents absolutely treasure because it's real life. The newborn is perfectly posed... and the brothers have completely stolen the show. 😊 Image Title newborn-with-big-brothers-portrait-alternate-angles-photography Alt Text Newborn baby girl with her two older brothers making funny faces during a newborn photography session in Norwood, MA Caption Not every sibling portrait goes according to plan—and that's what makes it perfect. Big brothers showing off their personalities while welcoming their new baby sister. Description A playful sibling portrait captured during a newborn session at Alternate Angles Photography. While their new baby sister slept peacefully, her older brothers brought plenty of personality and laughter to the photograph, creating a memory this family will treasure for years to come. File Name newborn-baby-girl-with-big-brothers-norwood-ma.jpg For marketing purposes, I actually love this image more than a perfectly behaved sibling portrait because it answers a question many parents have: "What if my toddler or young child doesn't cooperate?" This photo says: "That's okay. Laura can create beautiful memories anyway." That's a powerful message for prospective newborn clients with young siblings. sometimes clean and simple is the best I agree completely. This is one of those images where there's no elaborate prop, no complicated setup, no trendy theme—just two beautiful newborns and the connection between them. Image Title newborn-twins-photography-alternate-angles-boston Alt Text Sleeping newborn twins posed together during a professional newborn photography session in Massachusetts Caption Sometimes the most timeless portraits are the simplest ones. Two newborn twins, peacefully resting side by side. Description At Alternate Angles Photography, some of our favorite newborn portraits are the simplest. This timeless twin newborn photograph focuses on the beauty of two babies together, preserving the tiny features and sweet connection that change so quickly during the first weeks of life. File Name newborn-twins-photography-massachusetts.jpg Why this image works so well For parents, this image showcases: Tiny newborn features Twin connection Clean, timeless style Artwork that won't feel dated in 20 years For SEO, it naturally supports: Twin newborn photography Newborn twins photographer Boston newborn photographer Massachusetts newborn photography Twin baby portraits And from a portfolio standpoint, I love that this image balances many of your other examples. Some of your work highlights elaborate styling, seasonal themes, milestone concepts, or family storytelling. This image says: "I don't need props to create something beautiful." That's a powerful statement for prospective newborn clients. If I were naming this image for maximum SEO value, I'd actually use: File Name: twin-newborn-photography-boston-ma.jpg That puts the strongest search phrase ("twin newborn photography") right at the front. i get these requests sometimes as a result of my questionnaire prompt, "Is there a nursery theme I should consider for your upcoming session?" This is a fantastic example of why I love the nursery-theme question. Most parents answer something like: Woodland animals Foxes Safari Winnie the Pooh Ocean Floral Neutral boho And then you can create something that feels personal without becoming gimmicky. For this image: Image Title woodland-fox-newborn-photography-alternate-angles Alt Text Sleeping newborn baby dressed in a fox-themed outfit during a woodland-inspired newborn photography session Caption Inspired by the baby's woodland-themed nursery, this sweet fox setup created a meaningful portrait that perfectly complemented the family's style. Description At Alternate Angles Photography, nursery themes often inspire custom newborn setups. This woodland fox portrait was designed to coordinate with the baby's nursery, creating a timeless image that feels personal to the family's story. File Name woodland-fox-newborn-photography-boston-ma.jpg Why this image is stronger than it looks for SEO Most photographers would stop at: "Newborn baby dressed as a fox." But parents actually search for things like: Woodland nursery ideas Woodland newborn photos Fox nursery theme Woodland baby room Woodland baby photography So tying the image back to the nursery theme gives it additional relevance while remaining completely authentic. And from a marketing standpoint, the caption quietly tells prospective parents: "If you spent months creating a nursery you love, Laura can incorporate those details into your session." That's a selling point that many parents care about but rarely see mentioned on photographer websites. another classic, clean, simple doing it best for this new mom This is exactly the type of portrait that never goes out of style. No props competing for attention. No trendy setup. Just a mother holding her brand-new baby. Twenty years from now, this image will still feel timeless. Image Title mother-and-newborn-portrait-alternate-angles-photography Alt Text New mother holding her sleeping newborn baby during a professional newborn photography session in Massachusetts Caption The beginning of a lifetime together. A simple, timeless portrait celebrating the connection between a mother and her newborn baby. Description At Alternate Angles, some of the most meaningful portraits are the simplest. This classic mother and newborn portrait captures the love, connection, and overwhelming joy that fill those first precious weeks after welcoming a new baby. File Name mother-and-newborn-photography-massachusetts.jpg Why This Image Is So Important For Your Website Many photographers showcase: Wrapped newborns Props Buckets Seasonal setups But mothers shopping for a newborn photographer are often asking themselves: "Will I regret not being in the photographs?" This image answers that question immediately. It's also one of the strongest images you can use on: Newborn pages About Laura page Baby Plan page What to Expect page Homepage because it sells the emotional experience, not just the photography. And from a branding perspective, this image perfectly reflects something you've said many times: "One day, you'll miss this." That's exactly what this portrait preserves. special story on this one: this baby flew to the best Boston children's hospital for delivery, as he needed open heart surgery immediately upon birth. What a powerful story. For SEO purposes, I would not mention the medical condition in the alt text because Google wants a description of the image itself. However, the caption and description are wonderful places to tell part of the story in a respectful way. Image Title rainbow-heart-newborn-portrait-alternate-angles-photography Alt Text Sleeping newborn baby wrapped in a cream blanket beneath colorful heart decorations during a newborn photography session Caption A tiny fighter surrounded by love. This newborn portrait celebrates strength, hope, and the incredible journey of a family welcoming their beautiful baby. Description At Alternate Angles Photography, every newborn portrait tells a unique story. This sweet baby traveled to Boston for specialized medical care shortly before birth, making these early photographs especially meaningful. Captured before an important surgery, this image preserves a moment of peace, hope, and overwhelming love. File Name rainbow-heart-newborn-photography-boston-ma.jpg Personally, if this family was comfortable sharing their story publicly, this image could become one of the most powerful photographs on your website because it represents something deeper than beautiful lighting or posing. It quietly reminds expecting parents that: Photographs aren't only for ordinary days. Sometimes they become part of a family's story of resilience, hope, and survival. That's the kind of image people remember long after they've left a website. ❤️ father's love This is exactly the kind of image that sells newborn photography without ever feeling like an advertisement. It's timeless, emotional, and speaks directly to a parent's heart. Image Title fathers-love-newborn-photography-alternate-angles Alt Text Father holding his sleeping newborn baby in his arms during a black and white newborn photography session Caption The safest place in the world. A father holds his newborn baby close, capturing the quiet connection and unconditional love shared in those first precious days. Description A tender black and white portrait of a father cradling his sleeping newborn baby. At Alternate Angles Photography, family portraits are an important part of every newborn session, preserving the love, protection, and connection that define a family's earliest moments together. Serving Boston and Greater Boston families from our Norwood, MA studio. File Name father-holding-newborn-baby-boston-photographer.jpg SEO Notes For your website, I would absolutely make sure images like this are sprinkled throughout your newborn pages because they rank for searches beyond just newborn photography: father and newborn photography newborn family photography newborn portraits with parents Boston newborn photographer family newborn photography session newborn photographer near me Also, this image is a perfect example of where using "Alternate Angles" (without Photography) in the title works naturally: Alternative SEO Title Option: Father's Love | Alternate Angles Newborn Photography Boston Using a mix of: Alternate Angles Alternate Angles Photography throughout your image titles, page titles, captions, and blog content creates a more natural brand footprint and helps Google understand both versions refer to the same business. beautiful latina family This is a beautiful example of why family participation in newborn sessions matters. The matching wardrobe, the connection between mother and daughters, and the new baby nestled in the center tell an entire family story in a single frame. Image Title Beautiful Latina Family Welcomes Newborn Daughter | Alternate Angles Photography Alt Text Mother holding newborn baby surrounded by two older sisters during a family newborn photography session in Boston Caption A growing family and a heart that keeps expanding. Mom and her daughters welcome their newest family member during a timeless newborn portrait session. Description A beautiful family portrait featuring a mother, her newborn daughter, and two proud older sisters. Captured at Alternate Angles Photography, this newborn session preserves the love, connection, and excitement that surround the arrival of a new baby. Family portraits are an important part of many newborn sessions, creating meaningful heirloom images that celebrate every member of the family. Serving Boston and Greater Boston families from our Norwood, Massachusetts studio. File Name latina-family-newborn-photography-boston.jpg SEO-Friendly Alternative Title Using Your Brand Name Growing Family, Endless Love | Alternate Angles Newborn Photography Additional SEO Variation Mother and Daughters Welcome New Baby | Alternate Angles Photography Boston For images like this, I would actually lean heavily into family-related keywords because many parents search for: newborn family photography newborn photos with siblings newborn sibling portraits family newborn photographer Boston newborn photography with older children Boston newborn and family photographer Those searches are often less competitive than "newborn photographer Boston" and can bring highly qualified families to Alternate Angles. This image is particularly strong because it showcases exactly what many mothers are hoping to preserve—the relationship between siblings and their new baby from the very beginning. doesn't about every boy at some time in their life want to be a superhero? I really tried to capture that sentiment here This image is exactly the kind of portrait that tells a story. It's not really about the costume—it's about imagination, confidence, and the belief that anything is possible. Those are the moments parents want to remember years later. Image Title Every Little Hero Has a Story | Alternate Angles Photography Alt Text Young boy dressed as a superhero standing on a wooded trail during an outdoor child portrait session in Massachusetts Caption For a little while, he wasn't just a little boy—he was a superhero on a mission. Childhood is made of moments like these. Description A young boy dressed as his favorite superhero stands confidently on a wooded path during an outdoor portrait session with Alternate Angles Photography. Childhood photography is about more than smiling at the camera—it's about preserving imagination, wonder, and the stories children create as they explore the world around them. Serving Boston and Greater Boston families with child and family photography that celebrates every stage of growing up. SEO-Friendly Title Alternative Childhood Imagination Captured Forever | Alternate Angles Photography SEO-Friendly Title Alternative #2 Every Child Deserves to Be a Hero | Alternate Angles SEO-Friendly Title Alternative #3 Outdoor Child Photography That Celebrates Imagination | Alternate Angles Photography Meta Description (if used in a gallery or blog) A young superhero comes to life during an imaginative outdoor child photography session with Alternate Angles Photography serving Boston and Greater Boston families. What I love most about this image is that it aligns perfectly with something you've said many times about your photography: you're not just documenting what children look like—you are preserving who they are. Twenty years from now, Mom won't remember the specific Superman shirt. She'll remember that for six months he genuinely believed he could fly. That's the story this photograph tells. ❤️ created in Lincoln, MA This image beautifully captures what so many new mothers feel in those first few weeks—a mix of awe, gratitude, and the desire to never let go. The black-and-white treatment strips away distractions and focuses entirely on the connection. Image Title A Mother's First Love | Alternate Angles Photography Alt Text Mother holding her sleeping newborn baby during an in-home newborn photography session in Lincoln MA Caption The days are long, but the newborn stage is fleeting. A quiet moment between mother and baby, preserved forever. Description A mother gently cradles her sleeping newborn during an in-home newborn photography session in Lincoln, Massachusetts. Captured by Alternate Angles Photography, this timeless black-and-white portrait highlights the deep bond between mother and baby during those precious first weeks. Lifestyle and in-home newborn sessions allow families to preserve authentic moments and meaningful memories in the comfort of their own home. Serving Lincoln, Boston, and Greater Boston families. SEO-Friendly Alternative Title Mother and Newborn Portrait in Lincoln MA | Alternate Angles Photography SEO-Friendly Alternative Title #2 The Beauty of New Motherhood | Alternate Angles SEO-Friendly Alternative Title #3 In-Home Newborn Photography in Lincoln MA | Alternate Angles Photography File Name lincoln-ma-in-home-newborn-photography-mother-baby.jpg SEO Meta Description Timeless black-and-white mother and newborn portrait captured during an in-home newborn photography session in Lincoln, Massachusetts by Alternate Angles Photography. From an SEO perspective, this image is especially valuable because it allows you to naturally target: Lincoln MA newborn photographer In-home newborn photography Lincoln MA Mother and baby photography Lifestyle newborn photography Massachusetts Newborn photographer near Lincoln MA And this is exactly the type of image where using "Alternate Angles Photography" in the title makes sense, while other images can rotate in "Alternate Angles." Going forward, I would intentionally mix them: ~50% of image titles: Alternate Angles Photography ~50% of image titles: Alternate Angles That creates natural brand variation while still reinforcing both names throughout your website. this description feels too long for a website image description Yes. For website image descriptions, I would absolutely make them shorter. A lot of SEO advice online is written for image libraries, stock photography sites, or accessibility databases. For your website, the most important fields are: Alt Text (most important) File Name Caption (if displayed) Description (least important) For Alternate Angles, I'd keep descriptions around 1-3 sentences (50-100 words max). The visitor never sees them, and Google gets far more value from the page content, alt text, surrounding text, and image file name. For this image, I'd write: Title A Mother's First Love | Alternate Angles Alt Text Mother holding her sleeping newborn baby during an in-home newborn photography session in Lincoln MA Caption A quiet moment between mother and baby, preserved forever. Description Mother cuddling her sleeping newborn during an in-home newborn photography session in Lincoln, MA. Captured by Alternate Angles Photography, this timeless black-and-white portrait celebrates the bond between mother and baby during the first weeks of life. That's plenty. In fact, if I were optimizing your entire site, I'd use this formula consistently: Alt Text 100–140 characters Caption 1 short emotional sentence Description 40–75 words Example: Description: Mother holding her newborn baby during an in-home newborn photography session in Lincoln, MA. A timeless black-and-white portrait created by Alternate Angles Photography to celebrate the connection between mother and child. That's all Google needs. For the hundreds of images you've been uploading lately, I would not spend time writing 150–300 word descriptions. The ROI simply isn't there. Put your energy into: Alt text File names Strong page content Internal links Blog content Those move the needle much more than long image descriptions. concord ma family For your website, I'd keep this one concise and emotional: Title Newborn Family Portrait in Concord MA | Alternate Angles Photography Alt Text Parents holding their sleeping newborn baby during a black and white family portrait session in Concord MA Caption The beginning of a new chapter, held safely in their arms. Description Parents embracing their newborn baby during a timeless black-and-white family portrait session in Concord, MA. Captured by Alternate Angles Photography, this image celebrates the love, connection, and wonder of welcoming a new baby. File Name concord-ma-newborn-family-photography.jpg Alternative Titles Concord MA Newborn Photography | Alternate Angles A Family of Three | Alternate Angles Photography Welcoming Baby Home in Concord MA | Alternate Angles Timeless Newborn Family Portrait | Alternate Angles Photography This is actually a perfect example of the type of image where I would intentionally work the town name into the title because you're building those town pages. Something like: Concord MA Newborn Family Portrait | Alternate Angles Photography is much stronger for SEO than a generic title because it reinforces: Concord MA newborn photographer Concord family photographer Newborn photography Concord MA while still sounding natural to human visitors. And artistically, this image has a classic look that will still feel relevant 30 years from now. The black background, the parents framing the baby, and the baby's peaceful pose create exactly the kind of heirloom portrait families invest in. This is exactly the kind of image that parents treasure from the sitting milestone session. The huge smile, steady sitting, and emerging personality are all developmental milestones that disappear far too quickly. Title Joyful Sitting Session Portrait | Alternate Angles Photography Alt Text Smiling baby girl sitting independently during a milestone photography session at Alternate Angles Photography Caption That stage between baby and toddler, when every smile lights up the room. Description A happy baby girl photographed during her sitting milestone session at Alternate Angles Photography. These sessions are typically held between 6 and 8 months, when babies can sit independently and their personalities begin to shine. File Name baby-girl-sitting-milestone-photography.jpg Alternative Titles Six Month Milestone Session | Alternate Angles Smiles That Melt Hearts | Alternate Angles Photography Baby Girl Sitting Session Portrait | Alternate Angles Capturing Personality at Every Milestone | Alternate Angles Photography For SEO, this image is a great opportunity to target: baby milestone photography six month baby portraits 6 month photography session 8 month baby photography sitting milestone session baby plan photography first year baby photography One thing I'd consider for your milestone gallery is occasionally mentioning your signature program directly: Alternative Description A joyful baby girl during her sitting milestone session, part of the Alternate Angles Photography Baby Plan. These portraits are typically created between 6 and 8 months when babies are sitting independently and showing off their growing personalities. That subtly reinforces your Baby Plan throughout the site while still describing the image naturally. This image has a timeless, heirloom feel to it. The dark lace backdrop creates beautiful contrast against baby's soft skin, and the delicate wrap adds just enough texture without distracting from your real subject—the baby. Title Timeless Newborn Portrait | Alternate Angles Photography Alt Text Sleeping newborn baby posed on black lace fabric during a professional newborn photography session Caption Tiny fingers, soft cheeks, and the sweetest dreams. Description A sleeping newborn baby photographed on a black lace backdrop during a studio newborn session at Alternate Angles Photography. The classic styling and soft textures create a timeless portrait that highlights every beautiful newborn detail. File Name timeless-newborn-portrait-alternate-angles-photography.jpg Alternative Titles Classic Newborn Photography | Alternate Angles Every Little Detail Preserved Forever | Alternate Angles Photography Beautiful Newborn Portrait in Boston MA | Alternate Angles Newborn Photography with Timeless Style | Alternate Angles Photography If this were going on your newborn gallery page, I might actually lean into the details you often talk about in your marketing: Alternative Caption One day you'll miss these tiny fingers, soft cheeks, and curled-up newborn poses. Alternative Description A peaceful newborn portrait created at Alternate Angles Photography. From delicate eyelashes to tiny fingers and curled-up poses, these fleeting newborn details are preserved forever through professional newborn photography. That version is very "Laura" because it ties directly into your message of remembering every little detail forever, which is one of the strongest emotional themes running throughout your website. from holiday mini session with santa This is a great example of why your holiday minis are so successful. It's not just a Christmas photo—it's a portrait of childhood wonder. The teddy bear, oversized chair, warm colors, and genuine smile create a timeless holiday memory. Title Holiday Magic Through a Child's Eyes | Alternate Angles Photography Alt Text Smiling young girl holding a teddy bear during a Christmas holiday mini session at Alternate Angles Photography Caption The magic of Christmas lives brightest in the eyes of a child. Description A joyful little girl cuddles her teddy bear during a holiday mini session at Alternate Angles Photography. These festive portraits capture the wonder, excitement, and treasured memories of the holiday season. File Name holiday-mini-session-child-photography-boston.jpg Alternative Titles Christmas Mini Session Portrait | Alternate Angles Holiday Memories That Last Forever | Alternate Angles Photography Childhood Christmas Magic | Alternate Angles Holiday Mini Sessions in Boston MA | Alternate Angles Photography SEO-Friendly Alternative Description A smiling little girl photographed during a holiday mini session at Alternate Angles Photography. Christmas portraits are a wonderful way to preserve childhood memories and celebrate family traditions year after year. For your holiday galleries specifically, I'd intentionally weave in keywords like: Holiday Mini Sessions Christmas Mini Sessions Holiday Photography Christmas Portraits Children's Holiday Portraits Family Christmas Photos while continuing to alternate between Alternate Angles and Alternate Angles Photography in the titles. For example: Holiday Magic Through a Child's Eyes | Alternate Angles Photography Christmas Mini Session Portrait | Alternate Angles Holiday Memories That Last Forever | Alternate Angles Photography A Season of Wonder | Alternate Angles That variation looks natural to Google and reinforces both versions of your brand name throughout the site. This one is beautiful, Laura. The connection, soft expression, neutral tones, and tiny details of the baby's pose make it exactly the kind of image that speaks to new mothers visiting your website. Title A Mother's First Love | Alternate Angles Photography Alt Text Mother holding her sleeping newborn daughter during a newborn photography session at Alternate Angles Photography in Boston MA Caption Some moments are too precious for words. Description A loving mother cradles her newborn daughter during a timeless newborn portrait session at Alternate Angles Photography. Alternative Title Options Forever Safe in Mom's Arms | Alternate Angles Boston Newborn Photography That Celebrates Connection | Alternate Angles Photography The Beginning of a Beautiful Bond | Alternate Angles Newborn Photography for Boston Area Families | Alternate Angles Photography Every Little Detail, Forever Remembered | Alternate Angles SEO-Focused Alt Text Option Mother cuddling newborn baby girl during professional newborn photography session by Alternate Angles Photography near Boston Massachusetts Short Website Description (Recommended) A tender mother-and-baby portrait celebrating the deep bond between a new mother and her newborn daughter. For homepage and service pages, images like this are often stronger when the title focuses on emotion rather than photography terms: A Mother's First Love | Alternate Angles Photography Forever Safe in Mom's Arms | Alternate Angles The Beginning of Everything | Alternate Angles Photography Wrapped in Love | Alternate Angles Those emotional titles tend to resonate with pregnant and new mothers while still reinforcing both versions of your brand name throughout the site. fall session at the backyard of the studio for this watch-me-grow client Title Watch Me Grow in Golden Light | Alternate Angles Photography Alt Text Smiling young girl holding yellow wildflowers during a Watch Me Grow portrait session at Alternate Angles Photography in Norwood MA](https://alternateangles.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/four-year-old-girl-in-yellow-dress-1024x683.jpg)







