Herworld (Singapore)

AFTER SEVEN YEARS AS AN ASSOCIATE ACCOUNTS DIRECTOR IN AN ADVERTISIN­G FIRM, ASHLEY DECIDED SHE’D HAD ENOUGH OF THE STRESS AND LATE NIGHTS.

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“At 1am, I saw a colleague who was due to give birth the following week still in the office,” she says. “I told myself, I didn’t want this to be me.”

After quitting her $5,000-amonth job, she explored many options. It was her brother who suggested photograph­y. “I always carried my DSLR around, even when climbing a mountain. It was a light-bulb moment!” she says.

Graduating with debt

Aware that her photograph­y skills weren’t good enough to launch a business, she took up a oneyear photograph­y course at the

University of the Arts London. There was one problem: She was not financiall­y prepared. School fees and expenses came up to $50,000. She took a loan of $40,000 from her uncle, and took on part-time jobs such as waitressin­g and babysittin­g to cover other costs.

After returning to Singapore, she set out to grow her photograph­y experience and portfolio. When she learnt that Groupon (now known as Fave) was selling family photograph­y packages, she negotiated a deal. She successful­ly sold 500 vouchers at $15 each, and used the profits to set up Ashley Low Photograph­y in 2011.

During her first year in business, she started doing newborn photograph­y – and fell in love with it instantly: “At my first shoot, I was shocked by how small a one-week-old baby was. But I saw how creative I could get, and became excited about the possibilit­ies.”

She turned it into her niche and became one of the pioneers of newborn photograph­y in Singapore. In 2016, she was named Master Photograph­er by the Master Photograph­ers Associatio­n in the UK.

No regrets

Ashley reckons she was “quite courageous” to take the plunge into entreprene­urship, but she hasn’t looked back.

If she had any fear, it was of failure. “I had to make it. My friends and family were very supportive, but I had older and conservati­ve relatives who felt that I should have been satisfied with what I had,” she explains.

For those considerin­g a career switch, Ashley’s advice is matter of fact: If you never try, you’ll never know. “We should always put ourselves first. If we are not happy with ourselves, we can’t make the people around us happy.”

 ??  ?? ASHLEY LOW, 40 FROM ADVERTISIN­G TO PHOTOGRAPH­Y ASHLEYLOWP­HOTOGRAPHY.COM
ASHLEY LOW, 40 FROM ADVERTISIN­G TO PHOTOGRAPH­Y ASHLEYLOWP­HOTOGRAPHY.COM
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 ??  ?? Ashley has photograph­ed more than 1,500 babies over the last 10 years.
Ashley has photograph­ed more than 1,500 babies over the last 10 years.

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