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heartfelt 1 380x247 I photograph the babies that didnt make it.

Photo by Gavin Blue from Heartfelt

Gemma works for a volunteer organisation of professional photographers from all over Australia called Heartfelt, who give the gift of photographic memories to families that have experienced stillbirths, premature and ill infants and children in the Neonatal Intensive Care Units of their local hospitals, as well as children with serious and terminal illnesses. Here’s her story.

I think it was the hair that got me. Days later it is still the hair that I’m thinking about. Little waves of it, slicked to her scalp by the way she had entered the world. Dried and curly with the remnants of birth. And her tiny lips, puckered ready for kissing. But this babe hadn’t entered peacefully, and the way her head lay, her tiny feet, her hands and her chest pinpricked with the texture of the towel that covered her, was testament to the lack of breath in her lungs.

Her mouth, that sweet kissable mouth, was dark and seemed to frown somehow. It was like she was sad she knew she’d almost made it from that deep dark place in her Mums belly to that safe milky spot on her chest. Still she lay there, a lovely chubby girl, and I took what I could of her for a memento. I took her face, her hands crossed over her little heart, her feet, everything I could get into my camera for safe keeping, and then I walked out into the relentless summer sunshine, to a world that moved on, paying no heed to the loss of her small breaths, and a parking ticket.

It was then, photographing the second dead child in less than an hour, that the midwife had turned to me and said “This part is the hardest part. I hate it”. And I knew she meant what I was feeling, that those little lifeless bodies, were more than their size. So many hopes and dreams, even expectations, were tucked up into their teeny hearts, under their miniature fingernails, in the wave of those birth formed curls, that they should have been 1000 feet tall not so terribly, terribly, eternally small.

In that same breath she’d asked me why I did it? Why?

I’d gotten up that morning, to a house full of family sleeping off the excesses of Christmas, and nabbed my niece off a sister thankful for the chance of some extra sleep. I’d had too many champagnes the day before to try for my own lie in, and greedily wanted P’s nine-month-old morning smiles to myself before the family rose and started the slightly competitive game of baby pass-the-parcel (each vying to be the apple of her delightful eyes).

We’d cuddled on the couch, and I’d nestled my nose into the soft folds of her darling little neck, absorbing her. I was born, and then much later so was she, into a family that loves babies. We’re not many, us lot, but we are treasured. Dad was stoked to be a father and welcomed us with home baked bread, and a spot on his chest that I still, thirty something years later, tuck myself into. Mum adored us completely, lavishing us with love, and delighting in our every moment. Then later, when we became a blended family, and I had two more sisters, and another Mum, we were chucked into this big melting pot of love-each-other (with a dash of exasperated just-get-along-you-lot) and told we could be anything we wanted.

We weren’t planned kids, nor the children of people who had tried for long, tiresome and tear filled years to conceive. We were just a raggedy bunch of ratbags, four stroppy girls, who grew up loved. And now the next generation has come along, perfect and kissable and delicious (yes, even at 5am). We’re also a family that throws the kids around, each of us rolling up our sleeves and mucking in with the tantrums, the nappies, the baths, the reading of books, the feeding and the entertaining. Each of us measuring ourselves in children, all adding slightly differently. For me; two nephews and a niece, who have changed my life in the most magnificent and unexpected ways.

I’ve lain with them, just to watch them breathe as they sleep, and my arms have been solace for their hurt. I’ve snuck them healthy chocolate crackles for breakfast (to steal from Roald Dahl “A stodgy parent is no fun at all. What a child wants and deserves is a parent who is SPARKY”), and I’ve told them off for drawing on the wall. My eldest nephew gets a delighted look on his face when I tell him I was the first person to see his face (he laughs too when I tell him he was a cranky squawk of thing who yelled his displeasure on arrival). I might not have grown any of them in my belly, and I may never grow any of them in my belly, but they are my babies too. And that’s the answer to her question.

I walked into the morgue the day after Christmas to give something to that mother whose dreams had ended when her tiny girl had died after 22 weeks inside her because of my babies. Because I’ve learned the value of each of their little breaths. And it was confronting photographing this perfect babe, who was impossibly small. Teeny tiny everything, teeny tiny everything except for how much she was loved. And a photograph is no tradeoff for the life her parents had started to colour in for her, nor for the anticipation of who she was going to become, but it’s all I have to give.

The midwife stood next to me, cooing at the tiny girl, who had come into the world before she had even had a name, about how precious she was, and how much she was loved. And although her small body was without any flicker of life, it seemed like the right thing to do. To talk to her as we photographed her. She paused too, and asked me if I was okay? It was a yes-and-no answer. Yes. I was. Because this moment was good, hard but good, and though it was just the three of us in that pastel walled viewing room, with its bland furniture and soothing palette, we were doing some more substantial than our surrounding suggested. And no, I wasn’t. Because I could see the pictures I was taking in the hands of someone who should have been holding her baby instead.

After I grabbed the parking ticket from under my wiper I drove to my sisters house. P squeaked her funny baby hello and spider-crawled across the room to my feet. I swept her up for a sniff of her sweaty summer skin, and kissed her round cheeks. Her hair waved along her scalp, stuck there by the heat. I felt the saddest then, holding one wavy haired girl and thinking of another, for those mums and dads, and for those aunties, grandmothers and grandfathers, for the siblings, and for all the people who loved those little babies, but wouldn’t get to squeeze laughter out of their tummies, or tell them stories, or hold their soft bodies close, feeling the rise and fall of their sleepy chests.

I carry my babies with me, a catalogue of our moments together in my heart, ready for recall at the slightest provocation (beware indeed a proud aunty launching into yet another tale of funny cuteness). But these babies too, are in my heart. I can’t name them, and they are not mine to grieve for, but they are there. Heart. Felt. So let this be a catalogue for you, of my moments with them, which were privileged and precious, no matter how fleeting.

Gemma did not take the following Heartfelt images but they are representative of the amazing work that she does:

Photo by Gavin Blue, Heartfelt

Gemma-Rose Turnbull is an award winning photographer, who has just released her first book Red Light Dark Room; Sex, lives & stereotypes which was the result of a collaborative project with a group of street sex workers in St Kilda.

This was originally published on her blog which you can find here.

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79 Comments so far

  1. Anonymous

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  2. Anonymous

    I used to print the pictures for the mummies and daddies of ‘angel babies’. This was in the day of 35mm, mind you. It is not a nice thing, but it is extremely neccessary – these babies existed. They were wanted, loved and in many instances, prayed for.
    I always felt like it was the very least I could do, it brought some small measure of comfort to a grief-stricken family, and I never felt like it was morbid. It also meant I was doing something, instead of standing there, saying nothing in case I said the wrong thing.
    All the babies were perfect in every way. But for some reason, it wasn’t meant to be. As the mother of two angel babies, I feel I speak with a little authority, at least. <3

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  3. Kylee

    I was told for 3 weeks after my son was born “sleeping” (at just under 20 weeks gestation) that there were no photos of him.

    Then one day I got a call informing me that a woman at the hospital had found some pictures that belonged to me. Pictures of my son. And she asked “Would you like them?” I could not breathe. OF COURSE I wanted them!

    I will be forever grateful to that woman who took the time to find those photos. Without them I would have felt incomplete. I have not yet shown our other 5 children those photos, perhaps I never will. Be at least I have that option :)

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  4. Lan

    I wish I knew about Heartfelt when my son was born. We have three blurry photos in place of a lifetime of memories but to this day, I thank the midwife who took those shots from the bottom of my heart.

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  5. sandrine

    magnifique tout simplement

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  6. Melissa

    Beautiful work, my baby girl was stillborn at 31 wks 14 yrs ago, I felt so strongly then about acknowledgement of my beautiful Lily and found that pictures were so important to me in my time of grieving and still do A photograph is one of very few ways to remember our angels and to have that be done by someone professional is a wonderful service to offer Like many others i wish you were around when i went through this to have your professional touch, keep up the wonderful work xx

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  7. Anonymous

    I too cannot read this. I have been blessed with two beautiful healthy children – one if which is 6 weeks old. Such an emotionally traumatic thing to go through that i cannot even imagine it let alone read it but good on you. I think that is an absolutely beautiful gift to give someone is such a emotional heartbreaking time. I hope when their hearts heal a fraction they can look back at those photos and give a little smile.

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  8. gemmarose

    Thank you for all of your extremely kind words. I’m so glad to be a part of a wonderful service, and so honoured that this has prompted you to share your beautiful, and heartbreaking, stories. My love to all of you, and more, my thanks for recognising the amazing work of Gavin and the Heartfelt team who work so hard to make this service possible.

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  9. JosieY

    I can’t read this, but Gemma God bless you and all the others who are doing God’s work here on earth.

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  10. Michael P.

    I love it. Gemma you are GREAT. Your work is ‘heartfelt’

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  11. Caroline V

    Gemma, you are amazing.

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  12. Grateful

    I lost my son at 23weeks, 6days last August and Heartfelt took some beautiful pictures of our beloved baby boy. He is our 3rd child and what Heartfelt did for us and the way in which they took these much treasured photos is a gift that words can’t express. To have such moments of love and grief captured forever I will be eternally grateful for our photographer and this organsiation. Thank you from the mother of an angel baby.

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  13. Ellen

    Thank you heartfelt! My brother (adopted), sister and I are the only surviving children of our mum’s 7 pregnancies. Of those 5 unsuccessful pregnancies, our twin brothers, Garnet & Cameron (fullterm stillbirth) were the only two of six boys whom Mum and Dad were able to name and were given the dignity of identity. To the day she died, Mum grieved for every one of her lost sons -there was no such thing as SANDS etc for my parents and fathers were never acknowledged as having suffered loss -so I thank you and honour and bless all of you who give the gift of acknowledgment, dignity, identity and remembrance to those families who have suffered the terrible pain of losing a child.

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  14. Etta

    Beautiful story, beautiful photos.

    Yo give such an irreplacable gif.

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  15. Carla

    Wow, what a beautiful story. My brother and sister-in-law lost their baby boy at 24 weeks earlier this month, and I know they were so grateful to the people that came and took photos, along with handprints and even gave them a teddy so they wouldn’t leave the hospital empty handed. Such a difficult time for them and our family, that means that these services are so greatly appreciated. Keep up the amazing work, so that more little sleeping angels’ families have something beautiful to remember them by.

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  16. Pingback: Never forgotten « Sionnan Maree Photography

  17. Anonymous

    Oh how incredibly heartbreaking. What a special gift you give to these families, you are amazing for what you do. I think the clincher was the note about the parking ticket, puts it all in perspective. Now if I could just stop crying.

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  18. SoMuchSerenity

    Amazing service to offer.. I am sobbing here reading about all these beautiful babies now angels. My genuine heartfelt thoughts go to all those who have lost children, I could not think of a more heartbreaking thing to endure xx

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  19. Cathy Crawley

    I am forever grateful for Heartfelt and for the gift that they gave me on one of my darkest days.

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  20. jo

    A beautiful article Gemma-Rose, and the images are also very beautiful.

    I can’t begin to imagine the emotion that must be involved with taking these photographs but I have the deepest admiration for you and the Heartfelt team.

    Thank you for sharing such a moving post.

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  21. lisadisa

    I love reading the stories on mamma mia but I rarely comment. This is so very moving and Gemma is so brave and special to do what she does. I just had to let her know. I had a miscarriage and like other Mums who have commented, have nothing show but a sadness in my heart. Although I now have 4 wonderful boys and with tears pouring down my face I am going to give them a kiss on thier litte sleeping faces.

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  22. Belinda

    What an amazing service, just beautiful. There is a place in the USA that does this too… its http://www.nowilaymedowntosleep.org/home/

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  23. nursemim

    This made me cry… I’m a nurse a budding photogropher; would love to be able to do something like this one day. Amazing work Gemma, you and the Heartfelt people are just beautiful. xo

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  24. Mandye

    The team at heartfelt are angels and the provide precious memories of our babies

    Xxx

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  25. nicolemadiganeverest

    What an amazing gift the volunteers at Heartfelt give to the men and women enduring such tragedy. Heart-wrenching, yet eternally beautiful

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  26. Iris Carden

    When I was a hospital chaplain – these were the patients who broke my heart.

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  27. Cee

    This is so sad and yet makes me feel kind of happy too. When my mother had a still birth back in the 80s it was whisked away from her and she was never given time to grieve. I can not think of anything worse. That is what is so beautiful about this. They were people, they meant something to someone so they should be remembered like everyone else.

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  28. Anonymous

    I thank heartfelt for the gifts that they have given me of my daughter, both in life and in death. I am not sure what I would have done without them.
    http://www.heartfelt.com.au

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  29. Sarah

    This article articulates why I will keep visiting this site – in everything there is hope. To the Heartfelt volunteers, you are truly doing the work of angels. To the families that have shared their stories of loss below, thank you for speaking up, and know that we share your grief.

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  30. Jayla

    I wish i had known about this a few weeks ago when i lost my daughter…who was just 5 1/2 months old. She was born at 25 weeks with a twin sister. Sadly Journey Alexis born weighing just 1 lb 3 ounces at birth never left the hospital that she was born at. She had Chronic lung disease and Pulmonary Hypertension that took over 75 percent of her lungs. The hospital did take a few photos of her and the family before we unhooked all of her monitors and machines…which i have….but it would have been nice to have been able to have a few photos of her WITHOUT…everything hooked up to her.

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    • Jude

      I am so sorry for your loss. She is beautiful, those gorgeous chubby cheeks are just adorable. My heart goes out to your family x

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    • JC

      Jayla, I am so sorry for your loss. It’s a beautiful photo of your daughter. Having experienced the death of my own daughter at 5 days old, I know a little of your pain. I just wanted to let you know that Heartfelt also offer a service of touching-up or photoshopping photos. I am thinking of asking them to fix up some photos of my daughter as she also had tubes everywhere and, as you said, it would be nice to have photos without all the medical equipment. Wishing you love and support in your grief…

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  31. Pickles3350

    Such a beautiful article. U are truly amazing. I am a midwife and we take pics even if the parents don’t want to see them and many parents come back in 12 months or so to collect them

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    • Melanie

      I’m glad that you do this as when I went through the loss of my daughter I said no to hand and foot paintings, photos etc, they placed it all in a bag of her belongings for when we went home and to go through when we were ready. I’M so glad now that they did that as you’re not thinking clearly at the time!!

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  32. TheIdlersWife

    I wish I had know about Heartfelt when my son was born. I would have loved to have some photos of him and his twin sister.
    The hospital was a great support, we could go and see him and hold him whenever we wanted. We have some photo’s taken after his birth but nothing like these beautiful ones.
    The hospital gave us clay prints of his hands and feet and I also have a necklace containing some of his ashes.
    My other permanent reminder of him is a tattoo with his name and a forget-me-not flower on the inside of my wrist.

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  33. Katmag

    It seems that some stories come just when you need them, I had never heard of this service before but as I write I am carrying a baby that has such terrible genetic prognosis that she will not get to full term and I am faced with the terrible ordeal of delivering a baby who I will never get to take home, I really hope that this service is available, I know how precious the evidence of her existence will be to me in the days and weeks to come.

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    • Mia E

      I am so sorry about your baby’s prognosis. We went through a similar experience and it was horrible.

      There is a website that I can recommend about creating memories with your baby. http://www.teddyloveclub.org.au/

      I wish you peace and strength through this ordeal.

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    • Jaime

      So sorry to hear about your difficult situation Katmag. How devastating for you and your family. Best best wishes for the coming months and please know you have a wonderful community here at Mamamia to support you if and when you may need it xx

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    • Gavin Blue, Heartfelt President

      Hi Katmag,
      Sorry to hear your bub’s prognosis. Feel free to send me an email at president@hearfelt.org.au
      Gavin

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  34. Allison

    Simplybeautiful.

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  35. Mia E

    I wasn’t told about them when my son passed away. The hospital took some photos but they are clinical and i hate to look at them. My husband found strength and took some beautiful photos of our son. The unfortunate thing is we don’t have many of our family.

    I often look at those photos and they help to remind me that my baby was real. That even though nobody except my husband and I and a few dear friends call him by name, or mention him, he did exist.

    Thank you for your beautiful work and giving the families precious photos and memories.

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  36. jetmum

    Dear Gemma,

    as a mum who has known the grief of losing my firstborn son (stillborn at 26 weeks) I want to thank you, with all of my heart, for the work that you & all at Heartfelt do.

    It is not just about the photos you take (although they are so, so important to us bereaved parents), it is about the respect, care & dignity you give to these precious babies of ours.

    Thank you…….& please know you are making a big difference to so very many lives who are touched by loss.

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    • Leanne

      I share your pain at having experienced the same loss, my baby boy Alex was stillborn at 26wks 4.5yrs ago. The hospital took photos, while they weren’t perfect I treasure them. Alex’s photo is framed and by my bedside, he is the last image i see at night and the first in the morning. I agree with not thinking clear and being able to really know just what we will want and need to get us through in the short and long term. In the months that followed I found an artist through Teddy Love Club who sketched Alex’s picture in led pencil using the photo from the hospital and it is perfect and softer looking than the amateur photos taken, all correspondence was done over the email, with the final drawing sent to me by mail, I couldn’t get enough, so I also had another artist do a sketch in pastels, this hangs proudly on my living room wall, he truly is a part of my life, having photos, sketches and whatever keepsakes you collect along the way, at the time of the loss and into the future, are a big part of the healing process. I wish you and anyone else experiencing the same grief, peace and love. My grief councellor’s words of advice were:”be gentle with yourself”. Alex’s mum Leanne

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  37. Kristie

    Heartfelt and the photographer that came to us in the hours of our grief were amazing. We are so blessed to have so many wonderful photos of our wee boy to remember him and share him.

    such a blessing to look at my boy each day.

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    • jetmum

      Kristie,

      that is such a precious photo. Thank you for sharing.

      xxx

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    • Mia E

      Beautiful

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  38. Lisa

    I am a photographer, and also Mum to beautiful daughters aged one and three. I often think of volunteering for Heartfelt, but can’t quite bring myself to do it. It’s amazing the work that these photographers like Gemma do, and I wish I had the strength to do it too. I would find it so heartbreaking, and at the same time I would feel so lucky and grateful for my own happy, healthy babies, that I would almost feel guilty that these parents could not experience the same with their ‘sleeping angels’.

    Maybe one day I can find the strength to share my talent with people for whom it would mean the world, but in the meantime, I give a standing ovation to Gavin and all the Heartfelt volunteers for the fabulous work they do.

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    • Ilona Nelson

      I was going to post a response along the same lines Lisa and you’ve said it so well. I’m a photographer and mum of two boys (1 and 3.5yo) and I hope to have the strength to help other mums some day.

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  39. Jan

    Thank you for sharing the beautiful yet heartbreaking work you do. It truly is a gift to bereaved parents. I lost my son at 24 weeks- he was born prematurely and passed away in my arms 49 minutes later. His photos are some of my most precious, treasured possessions. He was born too early for this world, but he was perfect in every way- and so utterly handsome and sweet. He will always be a part of our family.

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  40. Juzzy

    A beautifully written article. It’s great to see Heartfelt getting more national recognition. They offer such a wonderful service and the more people that know about it the better. Gavin has said recently that some very big hospitals refuse to tell patients about Heartfelt or even let their photographers in which is awful. All midwives, doctors and hospitals need to know about Heartfelt or a photographer in their area that would offer to come in and take beautiful photos x

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  41. mummydani

    Thank you so much for writing this, and for this amazing service that you provide. 5 years ago my daughter Madison was stillborn. I don’t know why, but we only seemed to share a few precious minutes with her.

    This was before the time of iphones to readily snap out and take pictures as is 2nd nature now, but although i then had a camera on my phone, it just never occurred to me to take a photo at the time – photos are supposed to be for happy times. When I was discharged from the hospital (10 hours after giving birth), leaving with only a memory box the nurses gave us, we found that as well as a tiny piece of her jet black her and her tiny footprint, they had included a few polaroid photos that I didn’t know they had taken.

    Although we absolutely cherish them, they are so upsetting to look at and it is very bittersweet – the camera must have been 20 years old and not working very well. The lighting was terrible and her skin looks so terrible and patchy and discoloured. The photos did not capture the way she looked and the way that we want to remember seeing her. Although I had a great support network (professional and friends/family) to help me through a difficult grieving period after the fact, there was no one at the hospital that could have suggested that I take a photo, or told me that it was ok to spend longer with her, or suggested that I unwrap her and hold her hand, or take off her hat and look at her hair. I didn’t get the chance to do any of those things because I was just so traumatized and frozen and not able to think of the things that seem to obvious to me now. The fact that you even have such a wonderful and special service available is so touching, and so reassuring to me to know that some people who have been through the same devastating experience are getting the opportunity to do all those fundamental things that I never got to do.

    Thank you so much !

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    • Leanne

      Hi, I just wrote a post, shared my experience at losing my baby, I talked about having a pencil and a pastel artist sketch Alex’s amateur photo and they created 2 very special pieces of art, they are softer and a lot less confronting, raw and sad than the photos taken by the hospital staff, the artists were so kind and gentle, respectful, they really care about what you want, just beautiful I would highly recommend it.

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  42. Katie

    What a beautiful story.
    My 2nd child was stillborn at 22 weeks. I took this photo myself as there was no service like ‘heartfelt’ available to us (although the nurses did give us a little book with footprints and photos to take home which was nice).

    I write about my loss (and life) at http://www.growcooksew.blogspot.com

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  43. Trish

    Such a precious photo and thank you Gemma and Heartfelt for giving grieving families something to hold onto too. I wish heartfelt had been there when our daughter was stillborn 7 years ago.

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  44. Natalie

    What wonderful work Heartfelt Photographers do. What a beautifully written blog Gemma-Rose, you have managed to make me cry and smile all at the same time.

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  45. Jade

    Wow. Such a beautiful and delicate piece of writing. Hats off to all and more writing like this.
    To all those mums, dads, brothers and sisters grandmas and grandpas who have lost such a precious life please know your children will never ever be forgotten in the hearts of those who love you

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    • Sarah

      I was (barely) holding it together when I got to your comment. You summed it up beautifully – these angels will never be forgotten.

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  46. Anna

    A beautiful story and a beautiful service.

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  47. Invisible Grief

    The work that Heartfelt do is amazing, making sure these wonderful babies are not only remembered but also treated just like any new addition to a family is – pictures to celebrate the arrival of a new family member because even though they may not be here they are still ver much a part of the families they were born into.

    As distressing as this may sound to some, I envy the parents who get to use Heartfelts services. Not because they have lost a child, I wouldn’t wish that on anyone but because they have something tangible to remember their child, images to look at, so their child will always have an identity. I have nothing to show for my multiple x multiple miscarriages except sadness at what might have been but yet wasn’t all at the same time – nothing to show people so in a way be able to say this, this is why I am grieving.

    So thank you Heartfelt for not only giving parents a lasting legacy of their babies but for allowing them to remember their child has an identity and will not be a forgotten member of a family.

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    • Juzzy

      I’m sorry for your losses and lack of a tangible ‘thing’ to help you remember your babies. Carly Marie Dudley writes babies names in the sand on a beach in WA. She also does hearts & stars & other symbols for people who have lost babies early in pregnancy. Google her, she writes in the sand for free & you only pay if you want a high resolution copy of the picture emailed to you. I have 2 live children & have had 4 miscarriages and I often think of my babies that didn’t make it and wonder who they might have been xx

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    • Anon for this

      I was thinking the same. I have 3 angels that I have no photos of , as they where too small to see ( 2 ectopic and 1 miscarriage) but am thankful everyday for my 3 living children,
      thank you for putting into words what I was thinking too
      xoxo

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  48. pamela311

    Your writing is so beautiful, Gemma. You are doing a great service to the heart broken parents.
    My daughter had premature quads, two were diagnosed with cerebral palsy. One dear little boy died at eleven months at home so I had the privilage of changing his nappy a couple of hours later, heartbroken myself, I just talked to him as if he was smiling up at me and listening as he often did in life. I knew my daughter couldn’t do this one last thing for her son. I have that snapshot in my head and often recall it as a happy memory and not morbid.
    Sometimes the things in life that seem unimaginable are the most satisfying.

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    • Mia E

      You’re a beautiful grandmother. My heart goes out o your family.

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  49. mamaofhope

    Thank you Gemma-Rose and thank you Mamamia, for continuing to promote the brilliant work of Heartfelt. I sadly had to use their services when my firstborn Hope was stillborn at 40+ weeks in August 2008. Gavin Blue, the president of Heartfelt, came to take our photos and we’ll never be able to to thank him enough. Hope is featured in photos 3 and 4 in this gallery and we have dozens more, with a few displayed around our home next to her living siblings who came after her. The photos of Hope, along with hand and foot prints and a small lock of her hair, are all we’ve got from the 40 glorious weeks I carried her through a beautiful, healthy pregnancy, and I hate to think of where I’d be in my grief if I didn’t have them.
    Heartfelt photographers are truly angels on this earth.

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  50. kate in wellington

    just so beautifully written. Thank you for sharing this. My first child died when he was 2 days old, such a beautiful boy. I love the photos we took of him, but wish I had something like this to remember him by. Amazing work you do, arohanui x

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