White flowy dresses have dominated maternity photography for years. They're beautiful, sure—but if you've been scrolling Pinterest planning your spring shoot, you might be craving something that feels more like you and less like every other pregnancy photo you've ever seen.
Spring 2026 offers so many directions beyond the expected. Whether you're booking a field session, a city shoot, or photos in your own backyard, the right outfit can make the difference between photos you frame and photos you forget about.
Spring light is softer than summer's harsh midday sun, but it's also unpredictable. Cloud cover shifts constantly, and golden hour arrives earlier than you'd think.
Solid colors photograph more consistently in changing light than busy prints. That doesn't mean you have to skip patterns entirely—it means choosing intentionally. A subtle floral on a cream background reads differently than a bold geometric print. The first feels romantic in soft light; the second can compete with your face for attention.
Jewel tones—emerald, sapphire, dusty rose—pop against green spring backgrounds without looking neon. Blush and sage work beautifully too, but they require a bit more contrast in your setting so you don't blend into the landscape.
If your heart is set on white or ivory, consider an off-white or champagne instead. True white can blow out in bright spots, making editing tricky. Cream and warm whites hold texture better and still give you that soft, dreamy look.
March through May means anything from 50 degrees and windy to 75 and humid, sometimes in the same week. Planning your outfit around a specific temperature is a gamble.
Long sleeves in a lightweight fabric give you flexibility. Bell sleeves and flutter sleeves photograph beautifully in motion—your photographer will likely ask you to walk, twirl, or have your partner wrap arms around you. Fabric that moves adds dimension to those shots.
If you prefer showing your shoulders, pack a cardigan or light jacket in a coordinating color. You can shoot some frames with it draped over your shoulders and others without. This also gives you outfit variety without an actual outfit change.
Cold arms photograph tense. If you're freezing, it shows—in your posture, your smile, your hands. Comfortable is always better than aesthetically "perfect."
Dresses dominate maternity photos for practical reasons: they're one decision instead of two, they elongate the body in a single line, and they don't have a waistband situation to navigate.
But separates can work beautifully, especially if dresses aren't your thing. A fitted knit top tucked or half-tucked into a flowy maxi skirt creates a similar silhouette while feeling more casual. A bodysuit with high-waisted wide-leg pants gives you a polished editorial look.
The key with separates: make sure the pieces complement each other photographically. Similar tones in different textures (a ribbed cream top with a satin champagne skirt) read as cohesive. High contrast (black top, white skirt) can look intentional and chic, but you'll want to see how it photographs in your specific lighting.
Most spring maternity shoots involve walking. On grass. On uneven ground. Sometimes for an hour or more.
Heels in a field look gorgeous in close-up shots but can make you miserable (and unstable) during the actual session. Consider block heels or wedges if you want height—they sink into soft ground less than stilettos. Flat sandals, especially strappy ones, photograph well and let you actually enjoy the experience.
Some photographers shoot barefoot and it looks beautiful. But if you're not a barefoot person? That discomfort shows too. Wear what makes you feel like yourself.
If your partner is joining you, coordinate without matching exactly. You in emerald and them in navy. You in dusty rose and them in cream. The goal is a cohesive color story, not identical outfits.
Kids are wild cards. Choose clothes they'll actually keep on and won't destroy in the car on the way there. Solid colors that complement yours work best—avoid character shirts or anything with words unless that's the vibe you're going for.
If you have older kids, giving them a small role (holding flowers, touching your bump, walking with you) keeps them engaged longer than asking them to stand still and smile.
Anything brand new with tags still attached that you've never worn. Photo day is not the time to discover that neckline gaps or that fabric wrinkles the second you sit down. Wear your outfit at least once before the shoot.
Heavy foundation or anything outside your normal makeup routine. You want to look like yourself, just polished. Matte lips photograph better than glossy, which can reflect light strangely.
Anything you have to constantly adjust. If you're tugging at a neckline or pulling down a hem every few minutes, it'll show in your body language.
Try on your complete outfit—dress, shoes, any accessories—and move around in it. Sit. Walk. Raise your arms. Can you do all of that comfortably?
Steam or iron everything. Wrinkles that look minor in your mirror become very obvious in professional photos.
Check the forecast and have a backup layer ready. Even if it's supposed to be warm, spring evenings cool quickly.
Your maternity photos should feel like a snapshot of this moment—bump included—but still unmistakably you.
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