Published September 29, 2007 07:27 pm - Young entrepreneurs pursuing their dreams continue to find success in the growing downtown area. Just ask Kelly Young, who opened her very own photography studio at 106 Webster St. back in June.
Focus On: Kelly Young Photography
BY BILLY BRUCE
The Valdosta Daily Times
VALDOSTA — Young entrepreneurs pursuing their dreams continue to find success in the growing downtown area. Just ask Kelly Young, who opened her very own photography studio at 106 Webster St. back in June.
Now Young is offering a full range of photography services, including weddings, portraits and what Young calls “lifestyle” photography. You can see her work and prices at www.kyoungphotography.com.
Her studio is located in a traditional historic-period house that also houses the Cotton States Insurance office. Young’s studio offers the quiet, professional setting for achieving a customer’s needs, but Young also does location shoots upon request.
“This was a hobby before, but for the last three years I have enjoyed making my living by doing what I love, so it has been a lot of fun,” Young said. “I’ve got a young daughter of my own, and I have worked with children when I was a social worker in California. So I’m good with kids and now I get to work with them doing something I love.”
Her lobby walls (and web site) are covered with color and black and white samples of her work, including the cutest shots of babies, one with an infant girl wrapped in rose petals, another in black and white with her daughter looking at her own reflection in a mirror, inspecting her application of red lipstick. Young says she’s had wide and varied requests for different types of shots, but the strangest request came at a wedding she worked in Florida.
“I’m scared of heights,” she said. “They wanted an aerial shot of themselves and their guests, so they put me up in a cherry picker. I told them I wouldn’t go too far up. But I got the shot they wanted.”
Get the shot you want, too. Young has the know-how.
Q: How did you get into the photography field? When?
A: I have always had a love of photography. Growing up, my grandmother kept many family photo albums. I would spend hours flipping through them every time we visited. I still do to this day. I decided to make the dream a reality about three years ago with the birth of my daughter. I became a stay-at-home mom and spent every free moment studying and learning about photography on a professional level.
Q: Do you consider yourself a photojournalist, an artist photographer, both, or what?
A: I consider my photography style a little bit of both. When photographing weddings, my assistant and I are photojournalists. However, I look for what special moment to let my artistic side shine as well.