- Birth Becomes Her, a resource for birth photographers, released the winners of its 2019 photo contest.
- Founders Monet Moutrie and Jennifer Mason launched the contest in 2016 because, as they told INSIDER, “birth photography is some of the most powerful documentary photography in our world” and they wanted to “showcase the incredible work being produced around the world.”
- Photo categories included postpartum, black and white, color, out of hospital, hospital, and overall.
- “We hope that these images help dispel fear,” Mason told INSIDER via email.
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Editor’s note: This post contains graphic images of birth.
Over the past decade, birth photography has become a growing trend. In a 2012 piece for the New York Times, Elissa Gootman attributed the demand to “both a surge of interest in the experience of childbirth … and a greater desire to capture all of life’s moments.”
A year later, photographers Monet Moutrie and Jennifer Mason launched Birth Becomes Her, a resource for both professional birth photographers and parents-to-be. The website also hosts a yearly competition for birth photographers to “bring attention to birth images from around the world,” the founders said.
“Birth photography is some of the most powerful documentary photography in our world right now,” Mason told INSIDER via email.
Earlier this month, Moutrie and Mason released the winners of the 2019 Birth Becomes Her photo contest. Scroll through to see some of the images that took home awards in this year’s photography competition.
3rd place, postpartum

Moutrie and Mason launched the contest in 2016, though its initial intention was to highlight breastfeeding photo during World Breastfeeding Week.
“[We] branched out into a ‘labor’ contest after that. We loved showcasing these images so much, that we decided to have a big annual contest each year to bring attention to birth images from around the world,” Mason told INSIDER.
2nd place, postpartum

During the contest’s first year, Mason said they only received a few hundred submissions. This year, they received over 1,200 submissions from North America, Australia, South America, Europe, and Africa.
1st place, black and white

Mason and Moutrie enlisted the help of a panel of judges who are “trailblazers in both the birth and photography communities” to select the winning photos.
Mason added that each image was judged on technical skill, creativity, emotional impact, and editing.






