Family Photo Shoot At The Louvre – Paris Photographer

 

I have been photographing this beautiful family for more than 20 years. They were my first clients in Los Angeles and it was a pleasure to photograph them at the Louvre Museum while they were recently on vacation in Paris. It has be such an honor to capture these three children as they have grown from babies to adults.  I really do have the best job and I’m so grateful for all of the families and couples who have chosen me to capture the special moments of their lives.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Juliane Berry is an American photographer based in Paris, France. Available for families, elopements, engagements, proposals, and portraits in Paris, Provence and throughout France and Europe.


9 Replies to “Family Photo Shoot At The Louvre – Paris Photographer”

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  4. Karie Lockerman

    I love how NAT and IPV6 are still massively misunderstoodNAT is not a security mechanism Firewalls are Your router still decides what is allowed in with IPV6, and should default to deny incoming connections Only connections you explicitly allow inward should get inWith IPV6 you don’t need NAT, and while the 64/64 split is generally true, there are other setups for subnets out in the wild Not every ISP is gonna give you a /64, some will only give you a single IPV6 address and you’re SOL for anything more As some others have pointed out, getting rid of NAT fixes things for several protocols that have to send data through multiple connections (FTP, SIP/RTP, IRC/DCCP) and makes it so you don’t need to do stupid tricks to find out your public IP address, and trick your router into mapping ports in (STUN protocol)“But NAT hides my internal network structure” – Not really 99 of NAT’ed networks use 19216801 as their gateway thanks to home routers coming with that default Cable Modems & DSL modems have fixed local IPV4 addresses that are pretty easy to guess by ISP, often with default passwords that the user hasn’t got a clue about There have been successful CORS attacks against home routers & cable modems All NAT is giving you is a false sense of security through obscurity

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