
The first 48 hours after I gave birth, I felt like I’d been hit by a dump truck and then handed a tiny, perfect human I was somehow supposed to keep alive. Not exactly creative director mode (and I say that as someone who spent nearly 30 years as one).
I’ve also been writing about pregnancy and birth for almost two decades, which means I’ve seen a lot of Fresh 48 sessions done well and a lot done in a panic. The photos that hold up are not the elaborate ones. They’re the real ones taken in hospital lighting, on a phone, by a sleep-deprived person doing their best. Here’s what’s worth capturing.
What Is a Fresh 48 Session?
A Fresh 48 is any photo documentation of your baby in the first 48 hours of life – whether that’s a hospital, birth center, or home birth. It can be done by a professional photographer, your partner, or honestly just you propping your phone up somewhere clever. The goal is to capture the raw, real, unrepeatable first chapter.
Fresh 48 Photo Ideas (The Full List)
- Pre-baby details: the room, the view, the hallway sign, the clock on the wall
- Baby’s arrival
- New family photo – close up and from a distance
- Birth parent holding baby – every angle you can manage
- Partner holding baby, with birth parent visible in the background
- Nurse or midwife with baby (always ask first)
- Baby in the bassinet, wrapped and unwrapped
- Baby details: ears, fingers, toes, peach fuzz, the top of that head
- Birth information card or bassinet tag with baby
- Siblings meeting the baby
- Grandparents and family meeting the baby
- Going home outfit, buckled into car seat, walking out the door
Photos You Should Take in the Hospital After Having a Baby

Before Baby Arrives
If you’re in early labor and your partner has two free hands, this is a weirdly good time to take photos. The parking lot. The room before it became chaos. The clock when you checked in. These feel pointless in the moment and absolutely fascinating 10 years later. Trust me on this one.

Baby’s Arrival
This part is a flurry and you likely won’t capture everything – especially if you’re the one doing the actual work of giving birth. If you have a birth photographer, great. If not, don’t stress. The medical team’s priority (rightly) is making sure everyone is okay, not holding for your shot. Let them do their thing, and grab what you can when the dust settles.



New Family Photos
If someone is willing to take a photo – a nurse, a doula, a family member – ask them to grab a few of the three of you. Try both close up and from across the room. The wider shot showing the whole hospital setting will hit differently when you look back at it.






Birth Parent With Baby
This is the one I feel most strongly about. I don’t care if you feel puffy, sweaty, or like you’ve recently survived something (because you have). Get in the photos. Take them from above, straight on, over the shoulder and at every angle. If you hate them now, tuck them away. You will not hate them later. I have never once heard a parent say they wished they had fewer photos from this moment.







Partner With Baby
Use any natural light coming through the room window and move toward it if you can. Try the portrait mode on your phone. Have the birth parent visible in the background if they’re up for it; those layered shots are really beautiful and tell the whole story of the room.






Baby in the Bassinet
Pro photographers do incredible overhead shots but I’m not going to tell you to teeter on a chair two hours postpartum. Instead, try a few angles: from the side, from the foot of the bassinet, and straight on. If a nurse or midwife is interacting with the baby and you’re comfortable asking, those candid shots are some of the most beautiful ones you’ll get.




Baby Wrapped Up
Get a few shots of that iconic pink-and-blue striped hospital blanket situation. Fun fact if you’re a trivia person: the Candy Stripe Kuddle-Up blanket was designed by A.L. Mills in the early 1950s – the same guy who made surgical gowns green. The company he founded, Medline, now sells 1.5 million of those blankets a year. You’re participating in a deeply American postpartum tradition.





Baby Unwrapped
String bean legs. Drum belly. Peach fuzz everything. You can wait until you’re home for this one if the hospital room isn’t cooperating, but do make sure you get it. These details disappear fast.





Tiny Details
Here’s a framework that actually helps when you’re too exhausted to think: far, here, close.
- Far = the whole room in frame — bed, baby, windows, the whole scene
- Here = you or your partner holding the baby, mid-range
- Close = fingers, toes, lips, eyelashes, the soft spot on their head
Shoot a lot. You can delete later. You cannot recreate this.





Baby Signs and Birth Details
Whether it’s the card on the bassinet, a custom name tag, a letterboard, or a “Hello My Name Is” sticker, snap a photo of it with your baby. Etsy has beautiful custom keepsake tags you can fill out, and if you know you want one, order it before your due date so it’s ready.







Siblings Meeting the Baby
This will either be a Hallmark movie moment or a genuinely hilarious disaster, and honestly both are worth documenting. Make sure someone is specifically assigned to capture this – not just hoping it gets caught. Here’s a post on 4 Tips For Introducing a Toddler to a New Sibling if you want to set it up for success.




Grandparents and Family Meeting the Baby
I’ll warn you: this section is where I always get emotional. There is something completely undone about watching the people you love meet your baby for the first time. Have someone ready with a phone. These are the photos that end up framed.





Going Home
Don’t pack up and leave without getting a few shots on the way out. The going-home outfit, the car seat buckle, the walk down the hospital hallway – these mark the end of one chapter and the start of everything else. They’re worth 5 minutes.



One More Thing: Birth Announcements
If you’re planning to send birth announcements (and I’d argue you should — people love them and they don’t take long), pick your design before you give birth. I partnered with Minted on this post because their birth announcement cards are genuinely beautiful, and having your design chosen ahead of time means you can literally just upload photos and go when you’re in the thick of newborn life.
What did I miss?
If you have a Fresh 48 shot that belongs on this list, drop it in the comments or tag me @pregnantchicken on Instagram. Just maybe warn me if it’s going to make me cry.
Next Up: The Ultimate Hospital Bag Packing Checklist
This post may contain affiliate links and was created in partnership with Minted. If you purchase through my links I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. Thanks for supporting Pregnant Chicken – it keeps the lights on and supports our free content. Updated May 2026.
























