You don't need a camera, a photographer, or a photography background to take milestone photos you're proud of. A modern smartphone, a window, a consistent backdrop, and the right props produce results that rival professional newborn photography — and carry more meaning because you took them yourself.
Here is a repeatable system for monthly milestone photos that gets stronger with every month you use it.
Why Monthly Milestone Photos Matter
Your baby's first year is the fastest period of physical change any human being experiences. In twelve months, they go from a curled newborn who can barely lift their head to a standing, communicating, personality-filled child.
Monthly milestone photos give you a consistent reference point for that change. Viewed together at the end of the year, they're genuinely breathtaking — and they become one of the most looked-at items in any family's photo archive.
What You Need
Backdrop: A flat, consistent surface. An organic baby blanket laid on a rug or the cot works beautifully. Choose something you can access every month.
Props: A milestone card or wooden milestone block to mark the age. Keep it simple — the baby and the age marker are the whole story.
Light source: A window with natural indirect daylight. Nothing else required.
Camera: Your smartphone. Modern smartphones in portrait mode produce more than sufficient quality for prints up to A3.
The Setup (5 Minutes)
- Choose your spot. Near a window, out of direct sunlight. Morning or late afternoon light is softer and more flattering than midday.
- Lay your backdrop. A Kiddospot organic cotton blanket in cream or a neutral design works as a clean, textured base for any age.
- Position the milestone marker. For newborns (0–3 months): lay the milestone card flat beside the baby. For 3–6 months: prop it at a slight angle as they develop head control. For 6–12 months: hold it in front of them or let them hold it.
- Position yourself. Directly above for the first three months. At their eye level from 4 months onward.
- Take 15–20 shots. You'll use one or two, but having options matters.
Timing: The One Variable That Changes Everything
A fed, just-woken baby in the half-hour window after a nap is your best subject. Set your monthly reminder for their typical wake-up time after a midday nap.
Trying to take milestone photos on a hungry, overtired, or overstimulated baby is the most common mistake. Build the photo into the post-nap routine and it takes five minutes instead of forty-five.
Month-by-Month Positioning Guide
| Age | Best Position | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 0–2 months | Baby flat on back, overhead shot | Minimal head control — don't prop them up |
| 2–4 months | Baby on back or tummy time, overhead or slight angle | Beginning to hold head |
| 4–6 months | Baby propped on arms or sitting with support | Great for personality shots |
| 6–9 months | Sitting, crawling position | Full facial expressions emerging |
| 9–12 months | Standing with support, crawling, or sitting | Action and movement work well now |
Editing: Keep It Minimal
The best milestone photo edits involve three adjustments: slightly increase brightness, slightly increase warmth, and if needed, reduce shadows. Avoid heavy filters or vintage presets — the natural look ages better and keeps the focus on your baby, not the aesthetic.
VSCO's A4 preset at 50% opacity is a reliable, neutral starting point for parents who want consistency across the series.
What to Do With Them
At the end of the first year, you'll have 12 monthly photos of the same child in the same location. Here are the most popular ways to use them:
- Print a photo book (Snapfish, Photobox, and Momento all offer Australian services)
- Frame a 12-month grid — an A2 or A3 grid of all twelve months makes a stunning nursery piece
- Compile into the Kiddospot Baby Memory Book — which includes dedicated photo pockets for each month
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the best app for taking milestone photos on a smartphone?
The native camera app on both iPhone and Android is sufficient. Use Portrait Mode on iPhone for a shallow depth of field effect. Avoid using digital zoom — move physically closer instead.
When should I start monthly milestone photos?
From birth or as early as possible. The "1 Day" and "1 Week" photos capture a stage that cannot be recreated. Even if you start late, begin now — the months you do have will still be meaningful.
How do I keep the photos consistent month to month?
Use the same backdrop, the same location, and the same time of day. These three variables create visual continuity across the series even as your baby changes dramatically.
Do I need matching milestone cards and blankets?
Matching isn't necessary, but a clean, neutral backdrop (like an organic cotton blanket in cream or white) and a simple milestone marker produce the most timeless results.
Kiddospot's wooden milestone cards and blocks are eco-friendly, reusable, and designed to complement any nursery. Free shipping to Australia and New Zealand.