What does it look like to build an editorial family photography business entirely on your own terms, without posting on social media and with a starting package well above $2,000? In Episode 159 of The Motherhood Anthology podcast, host Kim Box sits down with Katie Ward, a New York City-based editorial family and branding photographer, to talk about finding a distinctive photographic voice, overhauling your pricing, and building a business model rooted in creativity. If you’ve been wondering whether editorial family photography is a direction worth exploring, this episode is a masterclass.

What “Editorial” Really Means for Family Work
Katie defines editorial photography not as a trend or a filter preset, but as an approach rooted in the publishing world, think T Magazine, Vogue, or The New Yorker. The common thread is that the images feel elevated, intentional, and deeply personal. For family work, that translates into sessions that feel like a real slice of a family’s life, beautifully amplified rather than staged.
Katie’s background is unusually rich for a family photographer. She grew up on the Upper East Side, spent two and a half years digitizing the archive of legendary Magnum photographer Burt Flynn, studied fine art and art history, worked at Sotheby’s, and logged time in gallery direction and video production before getting laid off and deciding to go all in on photography. That layoff, a week before Halloween with a one-year-old at home, became the push she needed. She posted in a local moms Facebook group with 75,000 members, and over 500 people responded to that first post.
The Process Behind the Pricing
Working with Katie is far more than showing up with a camera. It begins with a phone call where she listens to who the family is: their routines, their style, their favorite places. She does FaceTime walkthroughs of clients’ homes to scout light, reviews closets and acts as a personal stylist, and uses a Japanese color theory book to build palettes that feel cohesive without being matchy. Sessions are built around real activities tailored to each family, making hot chocolate, jumping rope, or ducking into a century-old butcher shop on the Upper East Side.
Her creative fee sits at $750, with digital packages starting at $1,500 for 10 images, putting her starting package at $2,250 and average client spend around $3,500. She shoots hybrid film and digital, does all her own culling and editing by hand, and caps herself at six clients per month to protect the quality of her work and her creative energy.

The Shift That Changed Everything
When Katie doubled her prices, bookings slowed for about a year. At the same time, she stopped posting on social media, a deliberate choice rooted in her discomfort with publishing photos of children who can’t fully consent to an online presence. That meant finding an entirely new marketing approach.
She found it by investing in SEO and in the language on her website, working closely with Melissa Arlena (please confirm spelling), a marketing expert also inside the TMA community. The results were telling: in 2023 she booked about 40% of her inquiries. By 2024, that dropped to 12%, not because her work had changed, but because the wrong clients were finding her. After overhauling her messaging, the leads shifted. As Katie put it: “The leads that I’m capturing are the people who really want to work with me.”
Kim and Katie’s conversation kept returning to one theme: the early hustle phase isn’t something to skip. That period of doing a lot of work at accessible prices is where style and confidence get built. But at some point, the experience you’ve accumulated earns you the right to be more selective, and that’s where the business gets meaningful.
Listen and Learn More
Katie’s story is a reminder of what The Motherhood Anthology is built to support: photographers at every stage, with every style, working through the same core questions in their own way. Not every TMA educator shoots light and airy. Not every path to a profitable business runs through Instagram.
You can hear the full conversation in Episode 159 of The Motherhood Anthology podcast, available wherever you listen. Find Katie at katie-ward.com or on Instagram at @katiewardphoto.
Ready to build a business that reflects your own creative voice? The Motherhood Anthology membership gives you access to expert mentors, live coaching, monthly marketing suites, and a private community of photographers who are invested in your success. Learn more and join at themotherhoodanthology.com.
Episode Sponsor: Picture Perfect Rankings
This episode of The Motherhood Anthology Podcast is brought to you by Picture Perfect Rankings. Melissa Arlena is a TMA mentor who helps portrait photographers get found on Google through strategic SEO and blogging. Learn more about her work at Picture Perfect Rankings, and check out her Found & Booked program if you are ready for a done-with-you SEO system with personalized feedback on your website.

The Motherhood Anthology is a community and educational resource for photographers who want a profitable and sustainable business they love. With 15+ expert mentors and 7+ years of proven content, TMA helps portrait photographers build confident, thriving businesses through monthly education, mentorship, and a supportive community of 700+ members.









