We found out that we're having a little girl, and weare really struggling with coming up with a name. I absolutely love the name Sophie....but is it too common? I know Sophia is VERY popular... also love Isabella, but have a friend who just named her daughter that.

WDYT? need opinions please!!!!
Re: name help - too common? need opinions.
Sigh, I know. What do you think of Elle? We like that too. I'm stumped on girl names!!!!!
Those names are very popular, but if you love one of these names more than any other don't let it's popularity stop you from using it.
Have you looked at the SSA baby name list? You can look at the names ranking lower in popularity to see if any catch your eye.
Here's a link:
https://www.ssa.gov/oact/babynames/
You can also look by state to see what names are popular in your region.
IMO, Sophia grows up much better than Sophie. Plus, isn't Sophie that stupid giraffe thing?
And I happen to think Sophia Isabella is a lovely name. I'd combine your 2 favorites and go with it.
Sophie is NOT a nn for Sophia! Sophie is the French version of the name, and it's a very popular and well known name in France, and used to be a much more common and well known name in the earlier part of the 20th century. Just because it "sounds" so some like a nn, doesn't mean that it is, or even that it is childish. Granted, as Sophia has currently become trendy, it is now trendy in this country to give little Sophias the nn Sophie, but it is actually not correct.
Meanwhile, plenty of names that are literally nns, for example Jack, are accepted perfectly well as given names on this board.
This is one of my pet peeves on this board, when people make broad assumptions about what is and is not "correct" and are generally flat out wrong. I also get irked when people use traditional European spellings of names and the board screams "spell it correctly!" as though the Americanized version is the true "correct" spelling.
Anyways, sorry for the rant. Sophie is one of my favorite names ever. And yes, the giraffe thing is named Sophie.