There鈥檚 a technique to filling up your photo album with shots from your kids鈥 growing-up years鈥攁nd then聽sharing those聽images聽with the rest of the world. We asked National Geographic photographer and his son, , for a few tips. Aaron has shot around the world for dozens of publications聽and, in 2002,聽he聽聽in 154 days documenting what he saw. His son聽has over 210,000 followers in his own right,聽and (with dad鈥檚 help) he just launched a full of portraits from the American West. Mind you, he鈥檚 6 years old. Together, they鈥檝e honed a formula for taking real shots of family adventures.聽

Show Us the Real Stuff
I struggle with giving tips to parents trying to make idealized versions of their children. Social media is dangerous like that because we all share the 鈥渂est” or “most attractive” versions of ourselves, which makes for unreal expectations for our followers.聽
We are messy people. We have crappy days. Children have tantrums, parents have tired expressions, we step in dog crap, and we make bad pictures. We don't share much of that, but that鈥檚 real life. Take pictures of your kids crying and quote their hilarious tantrums. That would actually be interesting. 聽
Go On That Road Trip You鈥檝e Been Talking About
I absolutely encourage families to take a road trip! Last year, we traveled in a small bubble trailer and did some camping and ate bad food at diners鈥攊t made great pictures. It鈥檚 an American tradition for good reason. And if you鈥檙e looking for a great National Park to celebrate the centennial, go to Joshua Tree. You can鈥檛 go wrong there!
Kids Want Their Own Camera? Start with the Basics.
The is a fun camera鈥攊t鈥檚 the only one we use. I wanted Hawkeye's first camera to be analog, like the cameras of my youth. I wanted this partly out of my own nostalgia for film and the scarcity of physical images today, but also because I didn鈥檛 want to see a 4-year-old learn about taking photographs by holding his finger on the touchscreen of an iPhone until the device was filled with hundreds of photos of nothing. I wanted to find a way to slow down the process, and to make each frame mean something. I also wanted to make it about meeting people, for each photo to become an interaction.聽
Speaking of Interactions, Photos of People Are Great
These days, Hawkeye is doing a lot of images of the people that visit our house. He鈥檚 making a wall of fame on our refrigerator of all our friends. He's also into photographing his little sister. Everyone likes those photos.

Go Candid
The best moments to try and capture are the ones filled with unbridled joy. When asked to pause and pose, Hawkeye often shifts personality to a more self-conscious, less expressive version of himself, a mask of sorts. I try to catch him without his self-reflective mask.
Some photos just remind me of the best parts of trips: seeing Hawkeye happy and learning. Those photos are my favorites.聽
鈥nd Skip the Selfie
Nope. Not into the selfie. But Hawkeye did want to shoot our Christmas card one year, so I made him a manual, rope-operated contraption to push the button of his camera. It鈥檚 the clunkiest self-portrait machine ever and it looked AWESOME.聽