What do you do?

I'm an insurance manager and financial advisor for a branch office of a large financial services company. I've been here for just short of 15 years, since moving to Florida from California in 1994, where I was working as a finance manager for a car dealership. I handle estate planning & wealth preservation for the firm, which involves selling and servicing annuities, life insurance, disability insurance, long-term care insurance, 401(k), pension plans, corporate benefits, 529 college savings plans, etc. for our financial clients. Happily, I don't do any 'sales' - the people who buy these products are already our firm clients with investment accounts and other assets held here, who already have a need. I spent many years through high school and college doing cold-calling and other sales jobs to pay my way, and I really didn't want the high stress and reliance on commissions for the rest of my life.

I have had cameras since 1974 when my father bought me a Kodak Instamatic in New York City when I was 5 years old...and moved to my first SLR in 1978 at 10 years old (a Pentax ME Super which I still have!). But I honestly wasn't 'into' photography nor did I pursue learning the craft for the first 20 years. I was mostly just using the cameras as tools to take vacation photos and family photos, and though my Pentax was a manual focus camera, it had a meter in the viewfinder and I just turned the aperture ring until the meter was in the middle, and used 'P' mode to let the shutter speed be chosen automatically. I had no idea what shutter speed and aperture relationships were. I got a Canon EOS-IX in 1995 or so, which I also used in mostly automatic mode...this was my last film camera. In 1997, I decided to jump on the new technology and bought the Sony FD91 Mavica digital camera, which was a marvel to me. It had 1 whole megapixel, and an astounding ability to see your shot on the LCD screen as you were getting ready to take it - and what's more, you could use the spot meter to point at various darker and lighter points in the shot, and see the camera adjust aperture and shutter, visibly lightening and darkening on screen! I was blown away, and instantly fell in love with photography. I shot thousands of shots to floppy disk, mostly using spot meter and P mode, but finally understanding a bit more the relationship between aperture and the metering of the shot. Only after 5 years in 2002 when I upgraded to the brilliant Sony F717 did I realize that my years of 1MP digital photos were good for nothing but a 3x5 print! The 717 is where my photography love really bloomed - at 5MP, and with excellent F2.0 Zeiss glass, it was my first 'real' digital camera. With it, I learned how apertures, shutters, ISOs, and white balances actually worked, and for the first time learned to use A, S, and M mode to take control of the settings. I had finally become an amateur photography enthusiast.

I'm still an amateur with no designs on becoming a professional photographer, however I've been thrilled and honored over the past 3-4 years to have sold some prints out of my office to visitors who insisted on purchasing some shots I had displayed on my walls. I also was hired for a few minor shoots, for charity events such as golf tournaments, and a college baseball induction...all of which went to local newspapers or magazines - it was great to have photos published locally, even if the coverage was more about the event and less about the photographer! This past summer, I received a request from a national kid's magazine to purchase several photos for their June issue, which was a Cloud Nine thrill. I do not market my photography so I don't consider myself a professional, but it has been quite an honor to have somebody else offer to pay for a photograph you took. My photography is for me to enjoy, and to share with others in hopes they might get some entertainment or enjoyment out of it too - I hope to always have the opportunity and the time to enjoy photography and will always share it with family, friends, and online friends too whenever possible...and if opportunities occasionally knock, and allow me to get some pocket money from it...more's the better!
 
Well....I've been retired so long that I almost don't remember!! :rotfl:

Worked for N.J. Bell 30 yrs., installation, maintenance field foreman, outside plant fiber optic engineer and in 95'.......I hit that retirement eligible 30 year "magic number". :upsidedow

So....at 49 yrs. of age...I retired...yep, Bell Atlantic was giving too much $$ away back then to ignore!!

I spent a year home then went to Bell Laboratories (R&D for Telcoms) as a "regular employee" and district project manager. With my team, deployed new software technology to all the Regional Bell Operating Companies throughout the country and South America.
Then...after 7 yrs. got downsized..but it was OK, because I was eligible for yet another pension.;)

The "Best" job I ever had...lots of travel..zillion FF miles & Marriott pts., that I saved up and using now in retirement. :rolleyes1
 
I have been a stay-at-home-mom for 14 years. And I'm currently transitioning my photography hobby into a business. I've always been the mom with the camera. The one that passed out photos at playgroup and soccer games, just because I happened to catch someone else's kid doing something cute. Three years ago, I was asked to take my son's football team pictures. I did it and from there, the opportunities have flooded in.

Just this year, I declared myself a working mom and I love it. I don't have a real website up yet, I'm just working off a zenfolio gallery, but that's in the plans for 2009. I've done one wedding and decided that wasn't for me. But I'll take any baby, senior, family, pet, etc that comes calling!

I have a BA in English and have never done anything with it. If I had known 20 years ago how much I would love the lighting and the composition of photography, I would have taken a different route, but never have changed staying home with my boys. They are my greatest work.
 

Wow--lots of interesting careers around here. I'm an attorney who has recently reentered the workforce after being a "stay at home mom" (who didn't stay home much) for 5 years. I used to work for a large firm doing primarily employment litigation and civil appeals. Now I'm with a much smaller firm doing a little bit of everything, but I'm able to do much of it from home and on a part-time basis, which works well for me.

I don't have much interest in becoming a professional photographer unless of course National Geographic or Conde Nast Traveler calls and wants to pay me to travel the world with my family taking pictures for them. I'm sure that will happen any day now.
 
I'm a patent attorney (UK and European qualified). I'm a Senior associate with a large UK firm of patent attorneys (large for the patent profession in europe - its all organised very differently to the US) and specialise in biotechnology. I have clients ranging from Universities, to small start-ups and some of the biggest multi-nationals in the world).

Been doing it for 7 yrs since graduating from University, where my degree was in Genetics.

I'm purely a casual photographer and take pictures because i enjoy taking them.
 
Another bean counter here. I'm the financial controller of a pest control product manufacturer (we manufacture both chemical pesticides and other products). We're headquartered here in the USA, but we have foreign subsidiaries in Australia, France, Spain, Japan, Malaysia, Hong Kong, South Africa, and Indonesia. Good news is that I do get to travel a little, but haven't had the opportunity since picking up photography as a hobby at the beginning of this year. I'm headed to France within the next couple of months (Bordeaux and Paris), and plan on taking my gear.

I guess photography is my creative outlet since counting beans is not too terribly exciting.:rolleyes:
 
I have a degree in psychology that I've never used (except on my family)!
I run a before/after school program for K-2 graders.

Inherited my love of photography from my dad, who shone big bright lights on us Christmas morning and always used his light meter!!
 
I have a degree in psychology that I've never used (except on my family)!
I run a before/after school program for K-2 graders.

Inherited my love of photography from my dad, who shone big bright lights on us Christmas morning and always used his light meter!!

After school program for K-2. I bet you use your degree every afternoon!
 
I have been a stay-at-home-mom for 14 years. And I'm currently transitioning my photography hobby into a business. I've always been the mom with the camera. The one that passed out photos at playgroup and soccer games, just because I happened to catch someone else's kid doing something cute. Three years ago, I was asked to take my son's football team pictures. I did it and from there, the opportunities have flooded in.

Just this year, I declared myself a working mom and I love it. I don't have a real website up yet, I'm just working off a zenfolio gallery, but that's in the plans for 2009. I've done one wedding and decided that wasn't for me. But I'll take any baby, senior, family, pet, etc that comes calling!

I have a BA in English and have never done anything with it. If I had known 20 years ago how much I would love the lighting and the composition of photography, I would have taken a different route, but never have changed staying home with my boys. They are my greatest work.

i was a stay at home mom till my kids grew up now health problems pretty much get in the way of everything but i wish i had ignored my guidance counselors in high school and followed the above part as well...
i have a website with an occasional sale( yeah i know, i figure people with really bad vision must visit my site;) ) and would like to get more into selling some stuff locally at art type fairs etc even though i hate the thought of the face to face rejection:rotfl: . i'm more interested in the art side of photography which is good since it would be hard for me to schedule appointments for anything( would like to do kids, family portraits, not weddings but that probably wouldn't work out for me) so this way i can sit at my desk and play with photos. if i had gone the photo route i would have liked to take stuff like ads, ie food shots etc more than people
 
I'm a lead software engineer for a company that develops higher education software (basically, if you or your kids log onto a university website to check their grades, chances are that it's our product). I have a Computer Science degree. Mainly, the focus of my job is usually website/application interactions with databases.

I also volunteer for our zoo (the only one in the state) and have been for about 4 years. I do various things including their website, their photographer, logo designer and I rove grounds and talk to guests about the animals etc. I spent part of Saturday explaining to a 7 year old girl that our Manchurian Sika deer is the most endangered animal we have at the zoo, that they are pretty much extinct in the wild and only 3 zoos in the US have them. She turned to me and said "deer meat is tasty". That's the challenge of a zoo in Montana.

I donate tons of photos to the zoo (well, they have access to all that I take on flickr), but I also print a lot for them and we sell them for $5 a piece to support animal enrichment and I've sold a couple of thousand dollars worth. Talk about a niche market. :) And of course all of that money is theirs.

I'd love to do photography as more of a side income, I think but I don't know if I'd ever trust my photography enough to make a living from it. I have been pestering our conservation area which is internationally known for it's animal contraceptives to take me with them and I'll give them all my photos. They go all over the world, South Africa, Austrailia, Asia, you name it. I had them talked into taking me with them when they dart the wild mustangs we have in the Pryor Mountains but the agency that maintains that decided to do a round up this year instead. :(
 
I was a network support tech for the state in my previous life. Now I'm a full time mom and part time writer, part time crafter, and part time college student.

Photography was a hobby that fell by the wayside because of the hassles and/or expense of developing film, and which I took up again a few years back thanks to the wonders of digital. I've done some sessions for families we know and would like to get into professional family photography eventually, but it isn't something I have time to pursue right now with an infant at home.
 
I've been in the banking industry for 24 years, and survived many mergers. Started out in Commercial Real Estate, enjoyed the real estate boom in the 80's and the bust in the early 90's, moved over to IT..managed the department's network, ran my first Banyan server with a 2 MB harddisk:lmao: Then moved on to Novell with those idiotic diskless 386 workstations that Groucho previously mentioned :rotfl: Then the whole network group was outsourced and I moved to Database Management and Reporting where I found my niche with mainframe & midrange focus programming. I now do project management and client reporting but in data warehouse environments. MarkB, i'm your end user :)

I like what I do and the best part is flexibility where I can work from home.

Photography is a hobby, although I'm on my 2nd DSLR, I still have alot to learn
 
I have been pestering our conservation area which is internationally known for it's animal contraceptives to take me with them and I'll give them all my photos. They go all over the world, South Africa, Austrailia, Asia, you name it.

Animal contraceptives? Seriously? Is that so Sarah Palin won't have to go shooting wolves from airplanes anymore? :lmao:

I know, 74 posts and all I can find to comment on is animal contraceptives.
 
I am an engineer, designing electrical systems for construction equipment (with Furgus). I also have an IT degree in web development and two years of fine arts school (mostly photography of course).
All this technical background ties in well with digital photography! ;)

As for the two years of fine arts, there were two problems: one, it is tough to make as much $$$ as in engineering; two, the profs did not consider photographs of either cars or Disney to be "art". What do they know? :)
 
Animal contraceptives? Seriously? Is that so Sarah Palin won't have to go shooting wolves from airplanes anymore? :lmao:

I know, 74 posts and all I can find to comment on is animal contraceptives.

Well, unfortunately, the wolves still have to live in fear of Palin and a helicopter, canines are one of the few animals the contraceptive doesn't work on.

Yes, our zoo uses it, most zoos internationally use it, it doesn't prohibit natural behavior at all. A lot of urban populations use it (they'd rather have people with blow guns and darts giving the deer in a park across the street contraceptives than have a shotgun aimed at their house).

Here's the long boring explanation of how it works. http://www.zoomontana.org/conservation_center/index.html

You should have seen their pictures of some of the baby elephants in South Africa. I'd love to go as long as I don't have to do the intern job of getting a mother elephant ready for a pregnancy check (you don't want to know).
 
Animal contraceptives? Seriously? Is that so Sarah Palin won't have to go shooting wolves from airplanes anymore? :lmao:

I know, 74 posts and all I can find to comment on is animal contraceptives.

Well I'm glad you did, because I was wondering the same thing!:rotfl: :rotfl: :rotfl:
 
Well, unfortunately, the wolves still have to live in fear of Palin and a helicopter, canines are one of the few animals the contraceptive doesn't work on.

Yes, our zoo uses it, most zoos internationally use it, it doesn't prohibit natural behavior at all. A lot of urban populations use it (they'd rather have people with blow guns and darts giving the deer in a park across the street contraceptives than have a shotgun aimed at their house).

Here's the long boring explanation of how it works. http://www.zoomontana.org/conservation_center/index.html

You should have seen their pictures of some of the baby elephants in South Africa. I'd love to go as long as I don't have to do the intern job of getting a mother elephant ready for a pregnancy check (you don't want to know).

Well you learn something new every day. I had no idea that such things were in use. And I agree I don't need the details to know I don't want to mess around with a pregnant elephant!
 




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