About Sara Rogers Photography
Wowzers. I can hardly believe it myself, but Sara Rogers Photography opened for business in the fall of 2006. It has been a wild ride, and I feel so lucky to do something for a living that doesn't even feel like work.
I have always loved photography. I carried a camera around with me in high school. (That was a long time ago. The camera had actual film in it. Yeah, I know.) In college, I wasn't brave enough to major in something as vague as art or photography. So I majored in marketing and communications, instead. (Definitely more concrete, right?) I filled my elective credits with photography courses, and at one point, I even had a darkroom and developed my own film and made my own prints. It's the coolest thing in the world to see an image appear on the photo paper like magic. But darkrooms take long spans of uninterrupted time. And once I had children, I no longer had long spans of uninterrupted time. That's when I switched to digital photography.
Shortly thereafter, I started taking pictures of my kids, my friends' kids, family members at gatherings and reunions. Eventually, I took the leap to go professional, and I haven't looked back since. I now have something to keep my brain going strong, earn a little extra money for the family and get to meet some WONDERFUL families in the process.
I don't ever remind myself to smile.
I have always loved photography. I carried a camera around with me in high school. (That was a long time ago. The camera had actual film in it. Yeah, I know.) In college, I wasn't brave enough to major in something as vague as art or photography. So I majored in marketing and communications, instead. (Definitely more concrete, right?) I filled my elective credits with photography courses, and at one point, I even had a darkroom and developed my own film and made my own prints. It's the coolest thing in the world to see an image appear on the photo paper like magic. But darkrooms take long spans of uninterrupted time. And once I had children, I no longer had long spans of uninterrupted time. That's when I switched to digital photography.
Shortly thereafter, I started taking pictures of my kids, my friends' kids, family members at gatherings and reunions. Eventually, I took the leap to go professional, and I haven't looked back since. I now have something to keep my brain going strong, earn a little extra money for the family and get to meet some WONDERFUL families in the process.
I don't ever remind myself to smile.