 
 
Carol was taking a
test in my history class.
My Yashica TLR was
sitting on the corner of my desk.
I reached over and
quietly squeezed the shutter.
Blog Note: In case some of my newer readers have wondered how my life in photography first began, I'm reposting this article from February, 2020.
One question I’m frequently asked is “How do you get started in professional photography?”
 My standard answer is that you get 
into photography the way you get into prostitution: You start out doing 
it for fun, then you do it for your friends, then  you wind up doing it 
for money!
Actually, though, that's not how I started.   
In the summer of 1968 my second son 
was born. We were living in Miami at the time, and the only camera I had
 was an old Kodak Brownie with a sticky shutter. Obviously, something 
better was needed to make pictures of the new baby. I found a magazine 
ad from a company offering to give me a brand new Kodak Instamatic 
camera and five film cartridges for free if I would send the film to 
their lab for processing.
Not long after that I bought a photo
 magazine — the August,1968 issue of Popular Photography. More 
magazines followed, and better cameras. I was hooked. (As for the 
influence of the magazines, I think it would be fair to say that I would
 not be a photographer today if it had not been for photo magazines.)
Also in August, 1968, I began a new 
job: teaching in a private school. The following year, I was asked to be
 the faculty advisor to the yearbook staff. By that time, I had acquired
 a Nikon F and two lenses -- a 35mm f2.8, and a 135mm f2.8, both 
Tamrons. The school also had a Yashica twin-lens reflex donated by 
the yearbook company. 
 
Senior Car Wash
Florida
Christian School,
Miami, Florida
Yashica 24 Twin-Lens
Reflex, Plus-X (probably)
As it happened, I wound up making 
all the candid photos for the yearbook and doing the layout as well. I 
also photographed school activities and sports and sold prints to the 
students and their parents -- a practice that would probably be frowned 
upon these days, but it was a private, not a public, school, times were 
different then, and it was all perfectly acceptable. In the process, I 
realized that I liked photography better than teaching.
After that year I moved my family 
back to the Chattanooga, Tennessee area, which I consider my home town 
even though I was not born there, and began looking for ways to get into
 photography full-time. I picked up a few small commercial jobs, but 
nowhere near enough to make a living, tried my hand at selling life 
insurance (a disaster), and worked a year at a newspaper doing page 
layout.
In the summer of 1972, I followed up
 a classified ad I found in that newspaper and applied for a job at 
Continental Film Productions, a small film and audio-visual production studio. I was interviewed, but nothing happened until that fall, when I 
was called in for a second interview and hired as a trainee/general 
dogsbody. Over the next four or five years I worked my way up to 
producer/director/writer before leaving for a year as director of 
advertising at another organization. 
On January 1, 1978 I opened my own 
business in my basement, with the name Photomedia Productions and a 
$3000 deposit to create a catalog for an electronics company.
From there, it has been a long, sometimes adventurous, often difficult, always interesting, ride. Truly a life in photography.
 Signed copies of my book Backroads and Byways of Georgia
 are available. The price is $22.95 plus $3.95 shipping. My PayPal 
address is djphoto@vol.com (which is also my email). Or you can mail me a check to 8943 
Wesley Place, Knoxville, TN 37922. Include your address and tell me how 
you would like your book inscribed.
Check out the pictures at my online gallery: https://davejenkins.pixels.com/  Looking is free, and you might find something you like.
Photography and text copyright 2023 David
B.Jenkins. 
I post Monday, Wednesday, and Friday unless
life gets in the way.
Soli Gloria Deo -- For the glory of God alone.
Tags:   photography     cameras    Nikon F     Tamron     Yashica TLR     Popular Photography     Florida Christian School