If you’ve ever tried to nail a light and airy photography look and ended up with washed out skin tones or flat, hazy images instead, you’re not alone. In this episode of the Motherhood Anthology Podcast, TMA mentor Katie Lamb breaks down what light and airy photography actually means, and clears up the misconceptions that keep so many photographers stuck.
Katie has been shooting in this style for 17 years, and she’s spent just as long teaching other photographers how to achieve it with intention rather than guesswork. This episode is packed with specifics you can apply on your very next session.

What Actually Defines the Light and Airy Style
Katie explains that light and airy photography comes down to three key elements, and none of them are shortcuts. The first is soft, neutral tones, which apply to wardrobe, location, and background alike. She encourages photographers to think carefully about client wardrobe rather than assuming a client closet is required, noting that pricing itself often shapes what clients choose to wear and how intentional they are about matching a photographer’s style.
The second element is clean, creamy skin tones with real detail preserved, even across a range of skin tones within the same family. The third is soft shadows, present enough to add depth but never harsh enough to feel contrasty. Location matters just as much here. Katie looks for great light first, then softer trees without heavy dark trunks, open sky, and a balance of grass that isn’t freshly cut or overly wild.
The Misconceptions Holding Photographers Back
One of the most common myths Katie hears is that overexposing equals light and airy. In reality, overexposing blows out highlights permanently, and there’s no recovering that detail in post. She recommends spot metering directly for skin tones, and she’s candid that not every camera links spot metering to your focal point the way you’d expect, so it’s worth testing your own gear rather than trusting a quick search result.
The second misconception is that washed out, desaturated colors define the look. Light and airy does not mean lifeless, and the right balance of color keeps images feeling natural rather than flat. The third myth is that any soft light will do. Katie draws a clear distinction between clean light, which wraps around a subject and brings out true skin tones, and muddy light, which creates a dull, gray cast most often found in dense trees or low-light pockets. The quality of the light you use is everything, and learning to recognize it in the moment matters far more than memorizing a checklist.

Why Growing Your Eye Matters More Than Following Rules
What stands out in this episode is Katie’s emphasis on developing an eye for light rather than chasing a formula. Every location, climate, and season changes the equation, so the real skill is learning to assess light in real time and adjust with confidence. That kind of growth rarely happens in isolation. It comes from mentorship, community, and the chance to ask questions of photographers who’ve already worked through the same challenges.
Inside the Motherhood Anthology membership, mentors like Katie share this level of detail regularly, giving photographers a place to keep sharpening their craft alongside people who understand exactly what they’re building.
Listen and Learn More
Katie covers even more in the full episode, including her go-to wardrobe shops and a deeper walkthrough of metering technique for skin tones. If you’re working toward a light and airy style in your own galleries, this conversation is worth the full listen.
Find Katie Lamb at katielamb.com or on Instagram at @katiebethlamb.
If you want a deeper dive into exactly how Katie shoots and edits in this style, she covers it in full inside her Master the Light and Airy Style course. As a TMA podcast listener, you can use code TMA at checkout for a discount, which also applies to her other master level courses.
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.

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.










