One of the highlights of 2025 for me was assisting the amazing Lisa Cory (https://www.lisacoryphotography.com/ with a triplet session (one girl and two boys). When it comes to muliples, Lisa is an amazing Triplet Photographer in Ohio. It was a wonderful experience and Lisa even offered to let me snap a few photos after we had the babies posed. I’m so thankful for that, so I can always remember the day!

Lisa has done some incredible work with multiples and I have admired her for several years. Probably her most notable session was with quadruplets. The hospital in her town, where the four babies were born, now has a large print of the quads hanging. I am so happy to see her getting the respect she deserves!
These quad photos are incredible! Because they were discharged at different times, Lisa had to photograph them in stages across several days and then finally get some poses of them all together. You can view more photos from Lisa’s quadruplet session on her Instagram page – https://www.instagram.com/lisa.cory.photography


I have quite a bit of experience as a twins photographer, but not as a triplet photographer in Ohio. Until now! The twins sessions have all been very rewarding. Surprisingly, photographing twins is not that much different from singles. The thing that makes it challening is just not having enough hands! That’s where an assistant is crucial. One of us is always holding and spotting a baby. The babies themselves tend to settle pretty easily when they are together.

I have been lucky to get to do some twins sessions. Triplets, though, are rare and the chances that I will get a set through my studio doors, is slim. I am so lucky to live near a triplet phographer in Ohio! My studio is in Columbus, and Lisa’s is about 1.5 hours north of me. When she asked if I would assist for her upcoming triplet session, it was a no-brainer!
As you can imagine, triplets requires even more hands on deck! Ideally, another newborn photographer is the assistant so they can do more than just spot for safety. I was able to help swaddle and pose when Lisa needed me. Even with both of us working with the babies, we still needed their mom’s help for some poses. After Lisa got the babies in position, Mom and I worked together to spot them so Lisa could capture the image.

With all sessions, there is a pretty standard workflow that I follow. When it comes to twins, I try to stick to a similar order and eliminate some of the singleton poses, to allow time for posing the babies together. I noticed that Lisa ran her triplet session in much the same way. Pose each baby separately, get the solo shots, then get the same pose with the babies together. This keeps the babies more settled because you aren’t moving them around the room too much.

During some of the behind the scenes photos with a triplet photographer in Ohio you can find me spotting one of the siblings off to the side, but still on the same posing surface. This keeps the babies warm, in the same lighting, and not getting jostled about too much. After Lisa got her solo shots, we were able to scoot the siblings into the pose fairly easily.

The session did take longer than usual. Lisa had the babies return the following day for some more simple, swaddled up poses. But, man did we work hard and crank out some awesome poses for the triplet’s parents (and Lisa’s rock-solid portfolio)!

Thanks to Lisa, I can confidently say I am ready to tackle my own triplet session, if given the chance. And I think I know exactly who to call to assist me!

Are you in the Columbus area and want to know more about how a newborn session works? You can read all about it in one of my recent blog posts – Newborn Photography in Columbus, Ohio!