The person
behind the camera.
Based in Killeen. Born and raised in Central Texas. I didn't pick up a camera because I wanted to be a photographer. It started with cars. Late nights, meets, rollouts. My husband was already into photography and showed me the basics. That's where it started.
After a while I realized the car was never the whole story. It was always the person behind it. That pulled me into portrait work. People are harder. They get in their heads, feel awkward in front of a camera. But that's exactly what made it matter more to me.
Now I'm not shooting for perfect. I'm looking for the small moments people don't always notice about themselves, the ones you still feel ten years later.
Real over perfect.
I'm not building a Pinterest grid. The in-between, the unposed, the accidental laugh: that's the shot. Posed and stiff is the one that gets skipped over.
You'll feel comfortable.
Most people come in nervous. I deal with social anxiety myself, so I know that feeling. That's why I spend the whole session making it easy. You don't have to show up perfect.
Yours to keep.
Full-res files, no watermarks, no drip-feed. You paid for them. You own them. Print them, share them, whatever.