Categories
Weddings

Sarah and Matt’s Lareau Farm Inn Wedding in Vermont

Last summer I got to photograph Sarah and Matt’s microwedding at Lareau Farm Inn in Waitsfield, Vermont, where dogs comprised half of their guest list–seven human guests and five dogs to be exact. And on July 10th, 2021, I had the greatest pleasure of getting to continue capturing their wedding journey when their closest friends and family were finally able to gather together at Lareau Farm Inn for their first year anniversary party celebration. The silver lining of COVID-19 is that I got to hang out with this fantastic couple twice!

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Categories
Families

Oscar’s Newborn Photography

Baby Oscar’s newborn photography shoot in St. Albans, Vermont, was full of so much love and joy. We captured some really special moments with little Oscar, his parents, Nic and Emily, and his big brother and big sister. I even got to meet some of the fur-family, including two bunnies. I love every opportunity I get to be a family photographer and newborn photographer. From photographing tiny toes and hand to first smiles, it is always such an honor to take these first family portraits and newborn portraits! What an amazing little guy you have, Nic, Emily and family! Thank you so much for having me capture these moments!

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Categories
Editorial

Magazine Photographer for Vermont Community Foundation

What an honor it was to be a photographer for the Vermont Community Foundation’s Annual Report again this year. Along with the cover image (second row, left square) of my son and his grandfather at the 2019 Vergennes Memorial Day Parade, Vermont Community Foundation used several other shots of mine inside their magazine (tennis photo, hope heart) and had  me capture a portrait of Gardener’s Supply co-founder Will Raap with Lynette Raap.

Categories
Quarantine

Kids VT Cover Photography

Look who’s on the cover this month of Kids VT–it’s my daughter, Remy! Its the June magazine issue and you can find it inside of this week’s Seven Days, June 10-17, 2020. We were rollerblading down on the Burlington Bike Path near North Beach and we went through the tunnel. It was almost like an optical illusion and I’m including the original photo below, which I shot with a fisheye lens. I love how Kids VT designed this cover and I especially love the Editor’s Note Managing Editor Alison Novak wroteHere is only the last portion of it. She fully encapsulated the feeling of this photo. Please read it in its entirety here.

“The cover image of this issue, taken by Cat Cutillo on the bike path in Burlington, resonated so deeply with me because it feels symbolic of our world right now. We are in a bleak place, and there is so much uncertainty about what the future holds. Yet still we roll on, wobbly and uncertain, arms outstretched, with hope for a better tomorrow. That future is only possible if we work to counter those who espouse bigotry and hate. Let’s keep on moving toward the light.” —Alison Novak, Managing Editor Kids VT

Categories
Quarantine

STAY-SCHOOL ADVENTURES: Breaking Through, Quarantine Month Three

STAY-SCHOOL ADVENTURES: Breaking Through, Quarantine Month Three from Cat Cutillo on Vimeo.

This week marks the end of the school year for my first grader and preschooler. As days have become weeks and weeks have become months, we find ourselves mostly outside. This week, we explored Shelburne Pond and the land near our house. We talked about how we will use our voices to speak up for change and how people around the country and around the world are also speaking up for change.

Everywhere we looked, we saw metaphors in nature. On Saturday, we found a snakeskin in our backyard. We think it belongs to the snake we spotted days earlier slithering around the shrubs. My first grader explained to my preschooler that snakes shed their skin through molting. Online research told us that snakes are symbols of rebirth, transformation, immortality and healing. They shed their skin so that they can both grow and also get rid of the parasites attached to their old skin.

Near Shelburne Pond, we found a turtle carrying its home on its back. Its shell provides both shelter and protection We were carrying an enormous backpack stuffed with everything we might need for our outing, so we could relate.

We even found a frog at the pond and talked about its life cycle, and its ability to change so masterfully that it becomes unrecognizable from its earlier tadpole self.

We caught up with our bird friend in the backyard, who has made a nice life for itself in our birdhouse, with the freedom to come and go as it pleases. We believe this chickadee is creating a nest to lay eggs.

Nature has a way of turning over, of shedding its skin, of changing. I’ve been thinking about the bird eggs and hatchlings we will likely witness soon. In order for a creature to be born, it must first shatter and dismantle the very thing that has been its source of protection. An egg can’t hatch unless it breaks.