The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Framing looks of love Wedding photograph­er

Writer inspired by her career capturing happy couples’ big day

- By Tracey Bryce trbryce@sundaypost.com

Wedding photograph­er Tracy Gow was an expert in capturing the look of love in prints.

Now she is capturing that special moment in print – after swapping her camera for a keyboard to launch a new career as a romantic novelist.

Tracy’s debut novel is a sweeping romance set in the Scottish Highlands – and featuring, you guessed it, a wedding.

“People always say you should write about what you know – and Scotland and weddings are two of the things I know best,” Tracy said.

“It’s funny, when I read Mills and Boon back in the 80s, I used to think the locations sounded very exotic, but for me Scotland is one of the most beautiful – and romantic – places in the world.”

Tracy, 56, grew up in Ayrshire, before settling down south.

She returned in 1998 to Kinross with husband Phil and young sons James, now 23, and Matthew, now 21, and she’s been here ever since.

After 10 years as a TV camerawoma­n filming creepy crawlies for science documentar­ies, she decided to start her own business to fit better with the demands of a young family.

“Believe it or not, I actually started out with a degree in history and the intention to become a TV journalist.

“While I was at uni, I did a course in TV camera work. And as soon as I put the camera on my shoulder and saw through the viewfinder, I was hooked.

“For 10 years, I worked in TV, filming science and natural history.

“When we came to Scotland, being in Kinross, I was too far away from the cities where the big TV companies were.

“So when my youngest started primary school, I thought, ‘what am I going to do now?’

“I set up a business as a portrait photograph­er – but one day someone asked me to do a wedding.

“To be honest, I didn’t want to go down that route, but I was eventually persuaded. And 15 years on, here I am still doing it!”

Tracy has captured hundreds of weddings on camera in some of the most stunning locations Scotland has to offer, and she’s loved every minute of it.

The whole wedding experience proved an inspiratio­n for Tracy’s first writing project.

She first put pen to paper in 2013, when wedding bookings dried up.

“Nobody wants to get married in a year with a 13 in it in case it’s unlucky,” she said. “So I had a lot of free time.”

Tracy wrote a first draft of a romantic novel, but didn’t do anything with it.

A few years later, a friend encouraged her to enter a competitio­n in Prima magazine. The Love to Write competitio­n involved writing and sending in the first chapter of a romantic novel. The prize was a publishing contract with Mills and Boon.

“I wrote the chapter, sent it and didn’t think much else about it – until I got an email saying I’d been shortliste­d,” she said.

“When I got the call to say I had won, I almost dropped the phone.

“I had to ask them to put it in an email because I just couldn’t believe what I was hearing!”

Tracy juggled writing the novel with studying a Masters in Writing Practice and Study at Dundee University.

“I basically didn’t draw breath for 12 months,” she said.

“I wrote some of it before I started my course, then picked up again in the

 ??  ?? Former wedding photograph­er Tracy Gow enjoys some winter sunshine last week
Former wedding photograph­er Tracy Gow enjoys some winter sunshine last week
 ??  ?? Tracy takes a picture of a happy couple at the Forth
Tracy takes a picture of a happy couple at the Forth

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