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April 1, 2026
A guide to a grounded Easter — thrifted baskets, brunch recipes & all the Atlanta fun
A Letter to Mamas
There is something about this time of year that makes me want to slow all the way down. Light is softer. The mornings are cooler and the world outside is doing that quiet, hopeful thing where everything is just beginning to bloom — and honestly? It feels like permission. Permission to exhale, to linger, to let the holiday unfold instead of performing it.
New beginnings, slow mornings, the magic of watching kids on an egg hunt — that right there is the whole recipe for a good Easter. You don’t need a color-coordinated table scape or a matching linen set you’ll only use once. You need coffee while it’s still hot, flour on tiny hands, and that look on your kid’s face when they find an egg tucked behind a flower pot they’ve walked past a dozen times.
That’s the stuff. That’s what you’ll actually remember.
“A backyard hunt and cinnamon rolls is a perfect Easter. Let that land for a second. Say it again if you need to.”
The internet will have you believe that Easter requires a pastel aesthetic, a carefully curated basket from a boutique you’ve never heard of, and approximately fourteen coordinated activities. It doesn’t. What it requires is your presence — and maybe a good dip recipe for when the relatives arrive.
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The Art of the Slow Morning
Before the hunt, before the baskets, before anything — there is the morning. And I want to make a case for protecting it. Easter slow mornings are one of the most underrated gifts you can give your family, and they cost absolutely nothing.
Here’s what I mean when I say slow morning:
There is something sacred about a morning that isn’t rushed. These are the kinds of mornings that become a family’s lore — “remember when we made cinnamon rolls and Dad burned the second pan and we ate the first ones in the yard?” Yes. That one. That’s the Easter story they’ll tell someday.
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Can we talk about Easter baskets for a minute? Because somewhere along the way, baskets became a $60-a-child situation filled with things that will be in the yard by noon and forgotten by Tuesday. And I am here to gently suggest that there is a better, more beautiful way — and it costs less, supports sustainability, and honestly? It looks so much more interesting.
Here’s how to build a basket that feels genuinely thoughtful without spending a fortune:
There is a quiet joy in the hunt for a good secondhand find — and bringing your kids into that story is a gift too. “I found this little bunny from a mama who loved it, and now it’s yours.” That’s a story. That’s an heirloom in the making.
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If you’re looking to get out of the house — or want to add a little adventure to the long weekend — Atlanta and the surrounding area is genuinely full of good options right now. Here are a few worth knowing about, including some that aren’t on everyone’s radar:
April 4
8:30 AM
Kids collect five eggs and trade them in for a bag of treats. No registration required, free admission. One of the easiest, most low-pressure hunts in the area — beautiful outdoor setting and the kids genuinely love it.
April 5
7:00 AM
This one is special and a little unexpected — an annual sunrise service at the summit with early park access for attendees. If your family is up for an early-morning adventure with a view, this is genuinely memorable. Not widely talked about. Worth it.
Easter Sunday
Chef-attended buffet, Easter Bunny photos, children’s egg hunt, and views of the Midtown skyline from inside their covered garden tent. A lovely option if you want someone else to do the cooking this year.
Through April 26
A dinosaur-themed drone and light show on Saturday nights, a dino parade, prehistoric exhibit, and a 4-D movie. This is a great option for the weekend after Easter if you want to keep the holiday weekend energy going. Kids absolutely love it.
April 4–5
Over 150 artisan vendors, kids zone, local food, and Easter weekend festivities. A beautifully run local event that feels genuinely community-rooted rather than commercial.
And truly — a walk on the East Palisades Trail at Chattahoochee National Recreation Area is one of Atlanta’s most beautiful, underrated spring adventures. The bamboo forest tucked inside feels like stepping into another world entirely. Pack a picnic, bring your camera, go slow.
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From the Kitchen

You asked for two extremes — the beautiful, slightly ambitious one and the “I need something crowd-pleasing and easy for when family shows up.” Here are both, and they’re both genuinely wonderful.
The Ambitious One
Chewy, golden, made with real starter — these are the kind of thing you make on Saturday morning and feel very proud of by Sunday. Worth every step. Here is the recipe.
💛 Serve with a generous smear of cream cheese, smoked salmon, capers, and a squeeze of lemon for a brunch spread that looks like you really tried. Pair with sliced tomatoes and everything bagel seasoning and it becomes the whole table centerpiece. Leftovers toast beautifully for two days.
The Easy Crowd-Pleaser

If you’ve been on the internet at all lately, you’ve seen this one. It’s creamy, tangy, and genuinely addictive. Serve it with a French baguette or a big bowl of kettle chips and watch it disappear.
Prep10 min
Chill30 min
Serves8–10
Ingredients
💛 Make this the day before your gathering — it’s genuinely better after an overnight in the fridge and one less thing to do Easter morning. Stores for up to three days in an airtight container.
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A Gentle Reminder

The point — the whole, entire, beautiful point — is new beginnings, slow mornings, and the magic of watching kids on an egg hunt. It is the specific sound your child makes when they find the egg with the coin in it. The one who gives up halfway and decides to eat the eggs instead of find them. It is the toddler who keeps picking up the same egg over and over, too young to understand the game, too happy to care.
Your backyard is enough. A basket thrifted from a garage sale, filled with a secondhand Tonies figure and a tin egg holding a handwritten note, is more than enough. Cinnamon rolls from the refrigerated section, eaten in pajamas while someone spills orange juice — that is a full and perfect Easter morning.
The families I photograph always say the same thing when they see their images: I forgot how small they were. I forgot how happy we were in that ordinary moment. The magic was always there. We just have to slow down enough to be present inside of it.
Have the most beautiful, imperfect, real Easter weekend. I hope it is exactly what your family needs.

Spring is the season I wait for all year — soft light, wildflowers, kids in linen, the whole world smelling like something new. If you’ve been thinking about booking a spring session, this is the week. I have a small number of golden hour spots available in April and May, and I’d love to document your family exactly as you are right now. Ask about spring sessions →
Wishing your family the slowest, most golden Easter morning — with coffee that stays warm and kids who believe in magic a little bit longer.
with love · your photographer & fellow mama
