Marie Elizabeth Photography Elevates the Newborn Portrait Experience for Washington, D.C. Families

Washington, D.C., November 15, 2025 /EPR Network/ — Marie Elizabeth Photography, a leading DC newborn photographer renowned for her romantic and nostalgic imagery, is redefining what it means to capture the earliest days of motherhood. By combining fine art aesthetics with a fully pampering experience, Marie Elizabeth Photography offers a luxurious, effortless way for mothers to preserve their family’s legacy.

Founder and photographer Marie believes that newborn photography should feel as meaningful as the images themselves. Every detail is intentionally designed for busy mothers who crave beauty without stress. From wardrobe styling and professional hair and makeup to designing heirloom albums and wall art, Marie’s process ensures clients can simply relax and savor the moment.

“When my middle child was born, I skipped newborn photos because I was overwhelmed by all the planning,” Marie shared. “Now, I wish I had those images. That’s why my approach is different—I handle every detail so mothers can truly enjoy this fleeting chapter.”

Each session with Marie Elizabeth Photography is tailored to evoke the tenderness and timelessness of early motherhood. Her use of film photography and natural, romantic tones creates artwork that feels both nostalgic and enduring—the kind of imagery families will treasure for generations.

For Marie, newborn photography is about more than creating beautiful portraits; it’s about building a tangible legacy. “Holding photographs in your hands, walking by portraits of your children, flipping through albums—these are the small moments that become our family story,” she explains.

### About the Marie Elizabeth Photography Experience

Designed for nostalgic mothers, every newborn session includes:

– Access to a curated client wardrobe for mothers and children
– Professional hair and makeup services
– Location guidance tailored to each family’s story
– Fine art album and wall art design
– A fully pampered, stress-free experience

Through her signature process, Marie ensures that every client feels taken care of—from the first inquiry to the final artwork delivery.

### About Marie Elizabeth Photography

Marie Elizabeth Photography is a fine art maternity, newborn, and family photography studio based in Washington, D.C. Known for her romantic and whimsical style, Marie photographs motherhood with timeless grace and an old-world aesthetic.

Each session is crafted to preserve the beauty of family legacy through film photography and fine art prints, ensuring families can cherish their memories for decades to come.

**Website:** [www.marie-elizabethphotography.com](http://www.marie-elizabethphotography.com)
**Email:** marie@marie-elizabethphotography.com
**Location:** Washington, D.C.
**Instagram:** [@marie.elizabeth.photo](https://www.instagram.com/marie.elizabeth.photo)
https://express-press-release.net/news/2025/11/15/1720273

Stream It Or Skip It: ‘Ten Pound Poms’ On BritBox, About Brits Who Struggle To Start A New Life In 1950s Australia

**Ten Pound Poms: Stream It or Skip It?**

After World War II, the governments of both Australia and New Zealand sponsored programs that allowed residents of England to migrate to their countries for a mere £10. In the 2023 drama *Ten Pound Poms*, which aired in the UK and Australia, we follow several people who took advantage of that program and explore the ups and downs of building a new life in the Southern Hemisphere.

### Opening Shot

On a snowy day in 1956 England, we see Terry Roberts (Warren Brown) working on masonry at a factory, then flash back to a battle he fought in during World War II. Terry deals with those haunting flashbacks through drinking. One night, after he passes out in the street, a neighbor fetches his wife Annie (Faye Marsay), who brings him home. As Terry writhes in his own vomit on the floor, in full view of their children Pattie (Hattie Hook) and Peter (Finn Treacy), Annie spots a newspaper ad promising a new life in Australia for only £10.

### The Journey Begins

The Roberts family boards the ship that will take them on their journey to a new life. Meanwhile, we meet Kate Thorne (Michelle Keegan), who is supposed to be traveling on the same ship with her fiancé, Henry Broad (Hugo Johnstone-Burt). When everyone disembarks in Sydney six weeks later, Kate arrives alone. She tells the immigration officer that Henry changed his mind. He warns her that British passports are held by authorities for two years, a condition she accepts.

### Settling In—Or Not

Excited about their new adventure, the Roberts family soon discovers that the immigrant camp they are housed in is nothing like the advertisements promised. Terry struggles to find work and ends up digging ditches because Australians have first dibs on jobs.

Terry’s workplace is hostile. A co-worker named Dean (David Field) bullies him relentlessly, using the derogatory term “Pom” (a nickname for British immigrants) and claiming “Poms can’t even use the latrine.”

Meanwhile, Annie ventures into town and cunningly secures a job as a department store supervisor, despite lying by telling the manager her husband was dead. Terry, however, believes her place is at home, taking care of the family.

### Kate’s Secret Mission

Kate, on the other hand, takes a truck belonging to JJ Walker (Stephen Curry), the site supervisor, and heads to Sydney to visit the port office. She seduces JJ to get the keys to access immigration records, searching for someone she came all the way to Australia to find. The mystery of Kate’s story unfolds gradually, hinting at a darker backstory.

### What Shows Will It Remind You Of?

Created by Danny Brocklehurst, *Ten Pound Poms* bears some resemblance to *A Thousand Blows*. Many reviewers have also compared it to *Call The Midwife*, given its period setting and focus on personal struggles.

### Our Take

The Assisted Passage Migration Scheme was a real post-WWII program initiated by the Australian and New Zealand governments. It offered British families, struggling in postwar England, a chance to start fresh in a warm climate with suburban middle-class opportunities.

As depicted in the series, things were far from easy for British immigrants. The first episode effectively illustrates how Aussies derisively called “your majesty” those new Brits, mocking them for being out of place—even when families like the Robertses were working class.

As Dean cruelly tells Terry, “You got Blacks in Britain, don’t ya? Well, over here, you’re the Black.” This highlights the resentment many Australians felt towards British immigrants, whom they saw as job-takers. It takes much effort for the Brits to earn the Australians’ trust.

### Two Stories, One Darkening Path

The Robertses’ storyline portrays a working-class family trying to rebuild their lives amid adversity, while Kate’s narrative is shrouded in mystery and tension from the outset. Her deliberate choice to leave her fiancé behind hints at deeper motives, revealed subtly as she searches immigration records.

Both stories turn dark by the episode’s end. Terry, having finally found some acceptance among his coworkers, becomes entangled in a drunken accident caused by Dean, which may threaten his future. Kate’s plan also starts to falter as complications arise.

We’re eager to see how these dark turns unfold, particularly Terry’s storyline. Will the near-fatal accident haunt him as he tries to build a new life? Meanwhile, there are other stories in need of development—Annie asserting herself as a working woman, Pattie facing a possible pregnancy, and a side story involving JJ’s affair with Sheila Anderson (Emma Hamilton), a resident of the camp eager to return to England.

### Sex and Skin

The first episode contains no explicit content.

### Parting Shot

The episode closes with Terry returning from that fateful night with Dean, brooding on what lies ahead.

### Sleeper Star

Faye Marsay is underrated in her role as Annie. She brings depth and nuance to the character, especially during her confession to the department store manager, and her candid reflections on why her family left England.

### Most Pilot-y Line

Terry talks to Annie about their honeymoon B&B, describing the owner as having “a face like a smacked arse.”

### Our Call: STREAM IT

*Ten Pound Poms* is a generally watchable drama that explores the trials faced by British immigrants in post-WWII Australia. While a sudden dark turn in the first episode and a few underdeveloped subplots leave some questions open, the series promises a compelling look at resilience, identity, and cultural clashes.

If you’re interested in historical dramas that tackle real social issues with emotional depth, *Ten Pound Poms* is worth watching.
https://decider.com/2025/11/03/ten-pound-poms-britbox-review/

‘The Idea of You’ Author Robinne Lee Sets Second Novel ‘Crash Into Me’ for Summer 2026 (EXCLUSIVE)

Robinne Lee, author of the bestselling romance novel *The Idea of You*, will publish her second book, *Crash Into Me*, next summer.

Lee’s debut novel, published in 2017, tells the story of a woman on the precipice of turning 40 who embarks on a whirlwind romance with the lead singer of a boy band. The book sold nearly a million copies worldwide and was adapted into a film starring Oscar winner Anne Hathaway alongside Nicholas Galitzine. The movie became a global sensation, drawing over 50 million viewers on Amazon Prime Video and becoming the streamer’s No. 1 romantic comedy debut of all time.

“Women feel like I see them and see their worth and their value; how they want the world to see them as and how they’re afraid that the world no longer sees them,” Lee told *Variety* about *The Idea of You*’s breakthrough success. “I’ve given them permission to live that reality more fully, and to step outside of the box that society’s placed them in.”

Likewise, *Crash Into Me* is described as a “bold and fresh novel of love, lust and self-discovery.” The story follows Cecilia Chen, a wife and mother who reluctantly relocates from Paris to Los Angeles for her husband’s work, with their two children in tow.

As the title suggests, the story’s inciting incident is a car crash. The other driver is Anouk Ferrand, a swan-necked beauty from Cecilia’s past.

“It’s been 20 years since she last encountered the enigmatic model, on a photo shoot in Mexico,” the book’s synopsis details. (The year was 1996. Cecilia was a photographer’s assistant; Anouk was an unknown model, and this was the shoot that made her name.) “And it’s this chance meeting that will upend Cecilia’s life.”

The synopsis continues: “Sexy and spellbinding, at *Crash Into Me*’s core are familiar and complex challenges for many women: how to express creativity, how to be frankly sexual and emotionally vibrant in and out of a marriage, how to be an authentic friend and a good mother.”

In Cecilia, Lee creates a character straddling cultures: she’s an artist of Jamaican descent from the East Coast, married to a Frenchman whose career has catapulted beyond her own.

The intensity of the women’s physical and emotional entanglement drives the narrative, which also explores the dynamics of Cecilia’s conflicted marriage and her concerns about raising her multiracial children amid L.A.’s climate of privilege and power.

“Will what happened between them two decades ago sever the fragile bonds of the present? Will their addictive relationship destroy everything Cecilia has built? Will she find her way home?” the story posits.

In a statement previewing the book, Lee teased: “I wanted to seduce my readers with a privileged, glamorous backdrop and an uncertain future. To lead them on an unexpected journey. Show them the world through a different lens. And give them something to think about long after the last page.”

St. Martin’s Press has acquired the North American rights to *Crash Into Me*, which will be published on July 7, 2026. Elizabeth Beier, St. Martin’s executive editor, acquired the rights in a deal brokered by Richard Pine of InkWell Management. Penguin Michael Joseph (PMJ) will publish the novel in the U.K. on July 9.

Born and raised in New York, Lee is a graduate of Yale University and Columbia Law School. She is a writer, producer, and actress, most recently seen in Netflix’s limited series *Kaleidoscope* opposite Giancarlo Esposito. Her acting credits also include *Hitch*, *Seven Pounds*, *Hotel for Dogs*, *13 Going on 30*, *Being Mary Jane*, and the *Fifty Shades* franchise.
https://variety.com/2025/film/news/the-idea-of-you-author-robinne-lee-new-book-crash-into-me-1236554089/